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Tall Tulip Tree #2 (Black Diamond) Traditional Cache

Hidden : 9/27/2017
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

 

Another impressive Tulip tree along this trail, that I’m happy to notice and hope you’ll like too.

The information on this page is different from that for the other Black Diamond Tulip Tree.

Please remember: BYOP.


 

Here from: Know Your Trees at <http://bhort.bh.cornell.edu/tree/trees.htm>

 

48. TULIP TREE

yellow-poplar, tulip-poplar, whitewood

Liriodendron tulipifera Linnaeus

 

 

Tulip tree is one of our most distinctive and attractive trees. It is native from Saratoga and Rensselaer Counties westward along Lake Ontario to Lake Erie, and becomes more abundant southward in deep, rich, moist soils. Its large tulip-like, greenish yellow flowers have given rise to the name "tulip tree." The wood is light, soft, brittle, not strong, straight-grained, light yellow or brown in color, and is largely made into lumber and interior finish and used where a soft, easily worked wood is required. Veneer of yellow-poplar is highly prized in airplane construction.

 

Bark - on young trees, smooth, ashy gray or brown in color; on older trunks, light gray to brown, thick, distinctly and regularly furrowed and ridged.

 

Twigs - smooth, shiny, rather stout, reddish brown in color, often branching the first year, aromatic odor, very bitter taste.

 

Winter buds - terminal bud smooth, flattened, about 1/4 inch long, simple, blunt, covered by 2 reddish brown bud scales giving the appearance of a mitten; lateral buds similar but much smaller.

 

 

Leaves - alternate, simple, 4 to 6 inches long, almost square in outline, usually 3- or 4-lobed with truncate tip; the most distinctive and unusual leaf of any of our native forest trees.

 

 

Fruit - a cone, light brown in color, upright, pointed, 2 to 3 inches long. Seeds - long winged, ripening in September, and for the most part falling soon after; outer ring of winged seeds may stay on the tree into the next season.

 

Distinguishing features - unusual leaf, with "cut-off " tip; bitter taste, aromatic odor of twigs; mitten-like terminal bud.

 

 

 

One can argue about whether the "tulips" are the outline of its leaves or its cup-shaped flowers. But both undoubtedly contributed to the fanciful name given to this tree by early settlers. And the tuliptree is still beloved for its beauty today, serving as the state tree of Kentucky, Indiana and Tennessee. It is the tallest of the eastern hardwoods—and a rapid grower when conditions are right.

 

If you’re looking for a stunning tree that grows quickly and doesn’t suffer from many pest problems, your search is over.

 

 

On April 8th, the Tulip Tree's duckbill-shaped leaf buds were just beginning to open.

 

 

The cache is the usual tied in, camoed  kind of pill bottle, that you have to push hard to open and close. Please make sure you return it as found, with good camo. Don’t forget your PEN!

Additional Hints (No hints available.)