glennmac
Veteran Member
Patrick,
Re honeylocust, most people would not plant the natural species, gleditsia triacanthos, because of the thorns. There is a commonly available variety that is thornless: gleditsia triacanthos inermis.
You may want to consider osage orange. Here is a horticultural analysis I posted on another thread:
<font color=blue> Summarized from Prof. Michael Dirr of the University of Geogia, the author of the "Manual of Woody Landscape Plants" (known as the "bible" in the nursery trade):
Maculara pomifera is commonly called osage-orange, hedge-apple or bois d'arc. Averages 20'-40' in height with comparable spread. National champ is 60' x 85' in Charlotte County, VA. Fast grower: 9'-12' in a 3-5 yr. period. Only females produce the large fruit, the seeds of which squirrels will eat in winter. Rot-resistant wood is used for fence posts, bows, rustic furniture and patios.
Transplants readily. "The poorer the site the better; withstands wetness, dryness, wind, extreme heat, acid and high pH conditions once established". [Sounds like a Kubota.] "Has been used for hedgerows in the plains states; not worth recommending for the residential landscape; has potential for rugged, polluted areas." The wood contains 1% 2,3,4, 5-tetrahydroxystilbene, which is toxic to a number of fungi and which may explain the wood's rot resistance.
Some almost thornless cultivars have been developed or found. One is "Wichita" a near-thornless male clone selected by John Pair of Kansas State. "White Shield" was discovered near White Sheild Creek in western Oklahoma in the 1990's. It is "the most thorn-free clone to date and has beautiful leathery lustrous dark green leaves." It has grown to over 20' in 4 years at the Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh, NC.
Thus Dirr.
According to Prof. Donald Wyman, former director of the Arnold Arboretum at Harvard, in his book "Trees for American Gardens": osage-orange is "recommended for use only in the midwest, where it seems to withstand cold winters and summer drought better than most other trees. It is used chiefly as a windbreak or hedgeplant (along fence rows) because of its unusually vigoruous growth and stout thorns and ability to withstand heavy clipping. When planted along a fence row, it quickly grows into an impenetrable thorny mass capable of confining stock throughout the year."
This is me: It's rare to find a fast-growing hardwood tree. Most fast-growers are soft. It's a novelty tree here in the East. The fruit are fun to whack with a baseball bat.</font color=blue>
Re honeylocust, most people would not plant the natural species, gleditsia triacanthos, because of the thorns. There is a commonly available variety that is thornless: gleditsia triacanthos inermis.
You may want to consider osage orange. Here is a horticultural analysis I posted on another thread:
<font color=blue> Summarized from Prof. Michael Dirr of the University of Geogia, the author of the "Manual of Woody Landscape Plants" (known as the "bible" in the nursery trade):
Maculara pomifera is commonly called osage-orange, hedge-apple or bois d'arc. Averages 20'-40' in height with comparable spread. National champ is 60' x 85' in Charlotte County, VA. Fast grower: 9'-12' in a 3-5 yr. period. Only females produce the large fruit, the seeds of which squirrels will eat in winter. Rot-resistant wood is used for fence posts, bows, rustic furniture and patios.
Transplants readily. "The poorer the site the better; withstands wetness, dryness, wind, extreme heat, acid and high pH conditions once established". [Sounds like a Kubota.] "Has been used for hedgerows in the plains states; not worth recommending for the residential landscape; has potential for rugged, polluted areas." The wood contains 1% 2,3,4, 5-tetrahydroxystilbene, which is toxic to a number of fungi and which may explain the wood's rot resistance.
Some almost thornless cultivars have been developed or found. One is "Wichita" a near-thornless male clone selected by John Pair of Kansas State. "White Shield" was discovered near White Sheild Creek in western Oklahoma in the 1990's. It is "the most thorn-free clone to date and has beautiful leathery lustrous dark green leaves." It has grown to over 20' in 4 years at the Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh, NC.
Thus Dirr.
According to Prof. Donald Wyman, former director of the Arnold Arboretum at Harvard, in his book "Trees for American Gardens": osage-orange is "recommended for use only in the midwest, where it seems to withstand cold winters and summer drought better than most other trees. It is used chiefly as a windbreak or hedgeplant (along fence rows) because of its unusually vigoruous growth and stout thorns and ability to withstand heavy clipping. When planted along a fence row, it quickly grows into an impenetrable thorny mass capable of confining stock throughout the year."
This is me: It's rare to find a fast-growing hardwood tree. Most fast-growers are soft. It's a novelty tree here in the East. The fruit are fun to whack with a baseball bat.</font color=blue>