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Kids love the shiny buckeye seeds of the horse chestnut, and the long, bean-like seed pods of the catalpa, but for many gardeners, they just mean work. There are better choices.
Roasting chestnuts is a traditional holiday activity. But, if you gathered the nuts yourself make sure they are in fact chestnuts and not horse chestnuts or buckeyes, which are poisonous. There ...
Thank you kindly. — Jeanette and Joseph Dear Jeanette and Joseph: The tree is a native California buckeye, Aesculus californica. In other parts of the country the fruit is called horse chestnuts.
A: I am going to guess that you have one buckeye tree and one horse-chestnut. Both are in the Aesculus genus, but horse-chestnut leaves are much larger than the leaves of buckeye trees.
Things To Do Home and Garden The Garden Coach: Don’t mistake (toxic) horse chestnuts for the edible kind A California buckeye blossom. (John Rusk/Wikimedia Commons) By Patrice Hanlon, correspondent ...
Each spring, a horse chestnut tree on the University of Colorado’s Boulder campus puts on a floral display that stops people, even some of the multitasking undergraduates, in their tracks. Th… ...
Agriculture and natural resources officials say Wednesday the beetle infests maple, birch, elm, willow, buckeye, horse chestnut and other hardwood trees.
News Published: 28 April 1945 The Horse-Chestnut Tree (Aesculus Hippocastanum) ALEXANDER L. HOWARD Nature 155, 521–522 (1945) Cite this article ...