The book New England Trees in Winter was written by author Albert Francis Blakeslee Here you can read free online of New England Trees in Winter book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is New England Trees in Winter a good or bad book?
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High with a trunk diameter of 1-2% ft. ; further south much larger reaching 100 ft. In height; trunk tall, straight, continuous, or divided rather low down into large spreading limbs, forming broad open head, sometimes broader than high. BARK Brown to black, deeply fissured into long, more or less con- tinuous, thick, rough ridges which are somewhat flattened on surface or on older trees more characteristically rounded or sharp-edged, a section through one of the ridges forming thus an inverted... letter "V" with its apex somewhat rounded or in younger specimens flattened; bark of young trees and of smaller branches smooth. TWIGS Stout, light orange to reddish-brown, smooth with some- what bitter taste. LENTICELS pale, generally inconspicuous. LEAVES oblong, lanceolate to obovate, wavy-margined with 10-16 pairs of primary veins. PITH 5-pointed, star-shaped. BUDS Narrowly ovate-conical, sharp-pointed, 4-10 mm. Long. BUD- SCALES light chestnut brown, slightly hairy toward apex and on margins, appearing longitudinally striate if viewed toward light with a hand-lens.
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