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BARKING UP THE RIGHT TREE CAN HAVE COLORFUL RESULTS.


Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN

Trees are nearly always selected for their flowers, foliage, or form.

Yet, at this time of year, there is an often overlooked arboreal feature that may achieve sudden prominence in the garden. In winter, when most flowering ceases and deciduous
1. Falling off or shed at a specific stage of growth, as teeth of the first dentition.
2. Of, relating to, or being the first or primary dentition.
 trees shed their leaves, the stuff that covers branches and tree trunks, otherwise known as bark, may take the biggest bite out of our botanical observations.

Crape crape: see crepe. myrtle

Crape myrtle crape myrtle: see loosestrife. is probably the most popular flowering tree in Los Angeles. There are at least 50 crape myrtle varieties available in the nursery trade. Unfortunately, the varieties with stunning bark, the cinnamon siblings, are seldom seen. I often wonder what our parkways would look like in winter if the crape myrtles planted there possessed colorful bark. It appears that these cinnamon sisters are more expensive than their more common kin.

These crape myrtles with breathtaking bark are eminently suitable for Valley planting. Monrovia Nursery, which supplies crape myrtles to local retail nurseries, carries several cinnamon bark varieties, including the heavy blooming, white-flowered `Natchez,' lavender-pink `Muskogee,' and true pink `Pecos,' an excellent selection for small spaces that grows to only 8 feet tall and 6 feet wide. These varieties are all mildew resistant `Fauriei' hybrids with leaves that turn brilliant orange or red in the fall.

Ironwood

The Catalina ironwood (Lyonothamnus floribundus), whose name describes the color of its bark, is an evergreen with a columnar columnar /co·lum·nar/ (kah-lum´nar) having the shape of a column; arranged in or characterized by columns. growth habit and highly unusual fern-like foliage. Incense cedar (Calocedrus decurrens) is distinctive in never requiring pruning as it develops a perfectly symmetrical pyramidal shape that reveals reddish bronze bark.

Birch

The deciduous red or river birch (Betula occidentalis) has smooth coppery bark highlighted with white lenticels or slits which facilitate gas exchange between the trunk's interior cells and the outside air. Red birch grows slowly to around 40 feet and, although a California native, requires regular moisture because of its riparian habitat, which means that it grows naturally on the banks of rivers or streams.

Alder Al·der (äldr), Kurt 1902-1958.
German chemist. He shared a 1950 Nobel Prize for discoveries concerning the structure of organic matter.
 

I cannot say enough words of praise for the white alder (Alnus rhombifolia).

Its whitish to ash gray bark is marked with captivating eye-shaped scars, indications of where branches were once attached. When given proper spacing, this tree is highly symmetrical and requires little pruning even after it reaches its mature height of 50 feet. Its shimmering green foliage always looks like it has just been washed in the rain.

Gum

No discussion of beautiful-barked trees would be complete without mention of the lemon-scented gum (Eucalyptus eucalyptus (y'kəlĭp`təs): see myrtle. citriodora). The alabaster alabaster, fine-grained, massive, translucent variety of gypsum, a hydrous calcium sulfate. It is pure white or streaked with reddish brown. Alabaster, like all other forms of gypsum, forms by the evaporation of bedded deposits that are precipitated mainly from evaporating seawater. It is soft enough to be scratched with a fingernail and hence it is easily broken, soiled, and weathered. bark of this beauty gives it a unique backyard presence. A Mindanao gum or rainbow eucalyptus (Eucalyptus deglupta) grows famously on the edge of the UCLA botanical garden botanical garden, public place in which plants are grown both for display and for scientific study. An arboretum is a botanical garden devoted chiefly to the growing of woody plants. The plants in botanical gardens are labeled, usually with both the common and the scientific names, and they are often arranged in cultural or habitat groups, such as rock gardens, aquatic gardens, desert gardens, and tropical gardens. in Westwood, with peeling bark that is painted in pink, lavender and yellow-green.

This tree is tropical and cold sensitive so that, in the Valley, it should be given ample summer water and frost protection until it is robust enough, after a few years in the ground, to fend for itself.

Manzanita

A number of California native trees have notable barks that fall within the cinnamon to reddish brown spectrum. Anyone who has ever seen a mature arboreal manzanita (Arctostaphylos Arctostaphylos /Arc·to·staph·y·los/ (ahrk?to-staf´i-los) a genus of North American evergreens; A. uva-ur´si is uva ursi (q.v.).) species or hybrid, and has any true appreciation for plants, has to plant one. The manzanita's smoothly polished, cinnamon-red bark has no rival in the botanical world. Your slow-growing, highly manageable manzanita tree will never need watering and will only need a gentle pruning now and then to encourage even growth. Its pinkish-white, urn-shaped flowers and leathery green foliage will keep you perpetually entranced.

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Its smooth coppery bark highlighted with white slits makes th e red or river birch beautiful in winter, even after it sheds its leaves.
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Dec 30, 2006
Words:622
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