Trees Every Child Should Know: Easy Tree Studies for All Seasons of the Year

The Glory of Autumn Trees
EASY TREE STUDIES FOR ALL SEASONS OF THE YEAR BY JULIA ELLEN ROGERS
Illustrated
NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP Publishers
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY PUBLISHED OCTOBER, 1909
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES AT THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
The best time to begin to study the trees is to-day! The place to begin is right where you are, provided there is a tree near enough, for a lesson about trees will be very dull unless there is a tree to look at, to ask questions of, and to get answers from. But suppose it is winter time, and the tree is bare. Then you have a chance to see the wonderful framework of trunk and branches, the way the twigs spread apart on the outer limbs, while the great boughs near the trunk are almost bare. Each branch is trying to hold its twigs out into the sunshine, and each twig is set with buds. When these buds open, and most of them send out leafy shoots, the tree will be a shady summerhouse with a thick, leafy roof that the sun cannot look through. Among the big branches near the trunk very few leaves will be found compared with the number the outer twigs bear.
How can we tell whether the tree is alive or dead in winter? Break off a twig. Is there a layer of green just inside the brown bark? This is the sign that the tree is alive. Dead twigs are withered, and their buds are not plump and bright. The green is gone from under the bark of these twigs.
Under each bud is the scar of last year’s leaf, and if you look on the ground you are pretty sure to find a dead leaf whose stem fits exactly into that scar. If there are a number of these leaves under the tree, you may feel sure that they fell from the tree last autumn. Look carefully among the leaves, and on the branches for the seeds of this tree. If there is an acorn left on the tree, you may be sure that you have the tree’s name!

Julia Ellen Rogers
Содержание

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CONTENTS


ILLUSTRATIONS


HOW TO KNOW THE TREES


TREE STUDIES IN THE AUTUMN


THE SHAGBARK HICKORIES


THE DISAPPOINTING HICKORIES


THE BLACK WALNUT


THE BUTTERNUT


THE ENGLISH WALNUT


THE CHESTNUT AND CHINQUAPIN


THE BEECH


THE WITCH HAZEL


THE OAK FAMILY


THE WHITE OAK


THE BUR OR MOSSY-CUP OAK


THE LIVE OAK


THE POST OAK


THE SWAMP WHITE OAK


THE CHESTNUT OAK


THE BLACK OAK


THE RED OAK


THE SCARLET OAK


THE PIN OAK


THE WILLOW OAK


TREES WITH WINGED SEEDS


TREE SEEDS THAT HAVE PARACHUTES


THE AUTUMN BERRIES IN THE WOODS


THE CHANGING COLOUR OF THE AUTUMN WOODS


TREE STUDIES IN THE WINTER


TREES WE KNOW BY THEIR BARK


TREES WE KNOW BY THEIR SHAPES


TREES WE KNOW BY THEIR THORNS


THE NEEDLE-LEAVED EVERGREENS


THE FIVE-LEAVED SOFT PINES


THE WHITE PINE


THE GREAT SUGAR PINE


THE NUT PINES


THE HARD PINES


THE SOUTHERN PITCH PINES


THE LONGLEAF PINE


THE SHORTLEAF PINE


THE CUBAN PINE


THE LOBLOLLY PINE


THE NORTHERN PITCH PINES


THE CEDARS, WHITE AND RED


TWO CONIFERS NOT EVERGREEN


THE LARCHES


THE BALD CYPRESS


THE HOLLIES


THE BURNING BUSH


TREE STUDIES IN THE SPRING


THE AWAKENING OF THE TREES


TREES THAT BLOOM IN EARLY SPRING


THE AMERICAN ELM AND ITS KIN


THE MAPLE FAMILY


THE WILLOW FAMILY


WHY TREES NEED LEAVES


LEAVES OF ALL SHAPES AND SIZES


TREE STUDIES IN THE SUMMER


TREES WITH THE LARGEST FLOWERS


TREES MOST SHOWY IN BLOOM


TREES THAT BLOOM IN MIDSUMMER


THE EARLY BERRIES IN THE WOODS


THE SASSAFRAS


THE ASH FAMILY


THE HORSE-CHESTNUT AND THE BUCKEYES


THE BUCKEYES


THE LOCUSTS AND OTHER POD-BEARERS


WILD APPLE TREES AND THEIR KIN


THE CHERRIES


THE PLUMS


THE SERVICEBERRIES


VALUABLE SAP OF TREES


THE USES OF TREES


APPENDIX


INDEX


Transcriber’s Notes

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2013-11-15

Темы

Trees -- United States

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