Tree I.D. help please

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winland

winland

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Joined
Jan 24, 2012
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368
Location
44883
Can anyone I.D. this weed of a tree for me?
It has been in the back corner of my property for probably 25+ years.

Thanks.

weedtree1_zpsxbtcmupb.jpg


weedtree2_zpsbsi0qd8o.jpg


weedtree3_zpszljyak84.jpg
 
winland

winland

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jan 24, 2012
Messages
368
Location
44883
Thank you gentlemen for the quick and accurate information.
From what I have just been able to "google" it is an American Chestnut.
Apparently quite rare in these parts, northwest Ohio.
Apparently some fungus wiped them all out in the early 1900's.

Thanks again.
 
haveawoody

haveawoody

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Sep 22, 2011
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1,547
Location
Ontario canada
Roasting on an open fire.
Chinese Chestnut, have a couple I planted in my backyard.
Yours is a semi mature tree so you will get to collect chestnuts in Oct and roast em up whenever you please.
If you only have 1 tree the harvest will be small, they require a second to pollinate at a decent level.
 
msmith

msmith

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Apr 15, 2015
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Location
West Virginia
While the nuts are delicious, the bloom stinks something terrible, at least I think so.

Some interesting trivia;

The American Chestnut Society has crossbred the American Chestnut with the Chinese Chestnut to make them blight resistant. They are breeding them back to 15/16th of American Chestnut so that they have it's attributes. When they get back to 15/16th pure, some remain blight resistant, others do not. They then intercross breed the blight resistant ones to create a line of blight resistant American Chestnuts. Inbreeding is an issue when doing this, go figure. Their goal is to be able to reintroduce the American Chestnut into it's native range and be blight resistant.
 
Sherman

Sherman

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Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
18
Location
Mountain View, Arkansas
It has close resemblance to Sawtooth Oak and Ozark Chinkapin. I'll look in my seven tree ID books Wednesday to try to find more. The Ozark Chinkapins were badly affected by the Chestnut blight of 1927-1929 and recovery was difficult because the pathogen was continually passed down as the specie reproduced.
 

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