[Magdalen] Scranton

Lesley de Voil lesleymdv at gmail.com
Sat Jun 20 06:35:42 UTC 2015


Monterey not so extensive, but an interesting tree nonetheless. Radiata very popular all down the eastern seaboard. Some trees grow very differently in Australia than they do in NZ.  The kauri pine for example in NZ is a more spreading tree with strong, wide branches. In OZ, it tends to grow up taller with much smaller branches. (It's not a true pine, AFAIK.)
Regards
Lesley de Voil

-----Original Message-----
From: "Cantor03--- via Magdalen" <magdalen at herberthouse.org>
Sent: ‎20/‎06/‎2015 11:22
To: "magdalen at herberthouse.org" <magdalen at herberthouse.org>
Cc: "Cantor03 at aol.com" <Cantor03 at aol.com>
Subject: Re: [Magdalen] Scranton



In a message dated 6/19/2015 9:05:59 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
lesleymdv at gmail.com writes:

I  remember that my mother-in-law the Lancashire woman thought that all 
gums  trees were alike (nothing could be further from the truth) whereas I the  
true-blue Aussie thought that a pine forest is the most boring place on  
earth.
Regards>>>>
 
To add to the confusion, most places call members of the Eucalyptus 
genus "gums", but here in the Eastern USA, there are two unrelated
landscaping trees - Black Gum and Sweet Gum - using the "gum"
word.
 
And a word about the downunder countries, especially New Zealand, but
I think somewhat in Australia:  The USA remnant pine species, the  Monterey
Pine (Pinus radiata) has been extensively used for forestry purposes,  and
grows downunder much better than it's tiny native range in Southern
California.  It has become naturalized in New Zealand.
 
 
David Strang.


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