Posts Tagged ‘ginkgo biloba’

Morning Eye Candy: Soon to be Skunky

Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on September 19th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to comment

One or two more months and the ginkgoes will be brightening city streets with their firefly autumn yellows. Also stinking them up, for that matter. But, hey, sometimes there’s give and take in nature’s beauty.

Ginkgo biloba — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

The Maidenhair of Paracelsus

Posted in Learning Experiences on March 1st, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to comment

Ginkgo biloba 'Pendula'

Look at the maidenhair tree and you’ll see nothing worth taking to the salon. You may see “duck feet” in the leaves, as some Asian cultures have, but certainly no flowing mane of vegetal locks. Botanical nomenclature is a lot like the horse racing circuit in that regard–every so often you stumble over a designation that makes not even a whit of sense. Thus, to explain the common name of Ginkgo biloba, we need to think smaller.

“Fern” small, actually. The humble maidenhair fern (Adiantum aethiopicum happens to be sitting on our window sill), with its cascades of dainty green leaves, is the true point of origin for the towering ginkgo’s street moniker. And if you compare the two, you’ll see what many would call a family resemblance (if the ginkgo were directly related to anything else on this planet; it’s not). Each has leaves resembling the foot of a waterfowl. So why aren’t they named as such? To answer that, we look even further down.
read more »