Memorial benches have been strategically placed along the Laramie River. This one honors Rich Koschnitzki.
I know this tree is a cottonwood and probably a narrowleaf cottonwood, but I’ve been waiting for spring and leaves before making a decision. Now it’s May and there are still no leaves! If you’re wondering about the first photo -- it’s fake. About a month ago I clipped a few bare branchlets from my tree and put them in a jar with water. It wasn’t long before young leaves emerged.The cottonwood on the right has fat buds and even young catkins; mine (center) does not.
I clipped a few branchlets from the tree on the right above and took them home. Leaf tips soon emerged from the slender buds and out of the plump ones came female catkins (flower clusters).Female cottonwood flowers; the one on the right has the floral bract removed (Kohler's Medicinal Plants).
If you click on the image below, you'll see green pistils sitting on pale green discs. Their stigmas are the yellowish structures at the tip. Scale is in centimeters.A leaf bud and two flower buds from my cottonwood tree.
Cottonwoods have male and female flowers on different trees (dioecious). Since the female trees were already blooming, I was tempted to think the plump buds on my tree would produce male catkins. But I’ve learned not to jump to conclusions. Plants have fooled me before!I was right to be cautious. When I was photographing cottonwood parts, I noticed that catkins were emerging from the plump buds I had collected just an hour earlier. So I put them by a window and checked back in the afternoon. They had lengthened even more. I peeked behind the floral bracts with a 10x hand-lens and found ...
There's a gallery forest in the kitchen!