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Fraxinus
- To: m*@ucdavis.edu
- Subject: Fraxinus
- From: L* R* <l*@flinders.edu.au>
- Date: Thu, 10 Sep 1998 16:26:56 +0900
Sorry I've taken so long to get round to this. I meant 'Desert Ash' not
Mountain ash. The botanical name is Fraxinus rotundifolia and it's not
unlike Ailanthus. (Thuggish habits too!)
Liz
This is a very old thread but I did wonder whether the "Fraxinus" that
Liz is talking about could possibly be the dreaded and totally misnamed
"Tree of Heaven", the Chinese Ailanthus sp, which has replaced much of
the natural Quercus vegetation in these parts (Southern Italy, Adriatic
coast) after being planted as an ornamental street tree, a job it does
very well, were it not for its vigourous ash-like winged seeds which
seem to self-sow even in a crack in three inch thick concrete, and then
proceeds to grow at an alarming rate. Uproot it and up come new shoots.
A candidate for the title of thug to beat all thugs.
It looks very much like an ash tree (Fraxinus excelsior) from a distance
and can easily be overlooked where ashes are also present. Does your ash
have red berries or limegreen "keys"?
(By the way, I'm sorry your Vinca is such a problem, it's a godsend in
my garden!)
Anthony
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