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horse chestnut

Listing 1 - 10 from 89 for horse chestnut

Red flowers in the garden
... leaves. The fruit has bright red wings in the fall. Aesculus x carnea 'Briotii' - "Ruby Horse Chestnut". A deciduous tree growing up to 50 feet tall and 25 feet wide with panicles ...
hardyplants.com

California Backyard Orchard: Chestnut
... not be confused with the poisonous Horse Chestnut (Aesculus californica). Fresh chestnuts contain about 50% moisture. Unlike other nuts, chestnuts have low oil content (8%). Chestnut Varieties for Planting in the Home Garden Paul Vossen, Sonoma and Marin Co. UCCE Chestnut Fact Sheet UC Fruit and Nut Reserch and Information Center Chestnut Links ...
homeorchard.ucdavis.edu

Chestnut Recipes and Cooking Information
... many chestnut recipes, learn about chestnut history and how to store them. Chestnut history Probably one of the first foods eaten by man, the chestnut dates back to prehistoric times. The chestnut tree, ... . The European varieties are a bit larger in size than the native American variety. Horse chestnuts (generally considered inedible) and water chestnuts are of completely different species. You will ...
homecooking.about.com

Leaf Diseases on Ornamental Trees and Shrubs, HYG-3044-96
... Blotch of Aesculus. Pathogen: Guignardia aesculi This disease is a serious aesthetic problem on most horse chestnut and buckeye species, although bottlebrush buckeye (Aesculus parvifolia) exhibits excellent resistance. Large irregular reddish-brown ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Powdery Mildews on Ornamental Plants, HYG-3047-96
... azaleas, buckeye, catalpa, cherry, a few of the flowering crabapples, dogwood, English oaks, euonymus, honeysuckle, horse chestnut, lilac, privet, roses, serviceberry, silver maple, sycamore, tulip tree, some viburnums, walnut, willow and wintercreeper ...
ohioline.osu.edu
More from this site

Natural, Social, and Historic Resources of Roosevelt, Monmouth County, New Jersey
... ), the Carranza Pitch Pine (which shades the Carranza Memorial in the Pine Barrens), and a Horse Chestnut and a Yellow Buckeye both from the grounds of the home of the first governor ...
pluto.njcc.com

The American Chestnut
... chestnut, they are very delicious. True chestnuts are sometimes confused with Horse chestnuts and Buckeyes (Aesculus species) which have compound leaves and inedible nuts. The edible nuts of American chestnut The natural range of the American chestnut is ...
www.uoguelph.ca

trelec
... leaflet, rachis, petiolule, petiole. Bi-pinnately Compound Leaf of Honey-locust. Palmately Compound Leaf of Horse-chestnut. Leaf Shapes Elliptical - the leaf is widest about the middle,tapers to both the apex ...
gaia.flemingc.on.ca

HortNews- December 2004
... over mid-way through the roasting time. Note- American chestnut should not be confused with horse-chestnut, a tree found in some Nebraska landscapes. American chestnut, a member of the beech family, is native ... a very prickly bur. It has simple, oblong-pointed leaves that alternate up the stems. Horse-chestnut, a member of the buckeye family, was introduced to the United States from Europe. It ...
hortparadise.unl.edu

FLORA OF NORTH AMERICA - Future Flora of North America Volumes
... mermaidweed; Gunnera family; Loosestrife family + waxweed, redstem; Mezereum family; Water Chestnut family; Myrtle family + eucalyptus, rose apple, guava; Pomegranate family; Evening ... Rutaceae, Geraniaceae, Araliaceae & Apiaceae] – Bladdernut family; Soapberry family + heartseed, flamegold; Horse-Chestnut family + buckeye; Maple family + boxelder; Frankincense family; Sumac family + poison ...
hua.huh.harvard.edu




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