The cherries all are past their peak, but the crabapples are just coming into theirs. The 3 crabapples on 14th Street near Hutton are in full flower. The crabapples near my office are not all flowering, but there are more flowers than closed buds.
Cherry at 14th and Hutton
2 crabapples at 14th and Hutton, and a bit of Norway maple on the right edge
Crabapple at 14th and Hutton
Crabapple near my office
Crabapples near my office
There are also little yellow flowers on the barberry.
Barberry, May 7, 2015
The two sugar maples on the north side of the alumni house that are not as far along as many other trees, including some other sugar maples:
The Callery pear are blooming enthusiastically
Plenty of leaves on these Japanese maples
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Today's tree developments
In addition to the new green catkins, the birch have little green leaves.
Birch, May 6, 2015
The red maples have little leaves above the samaras.
A few of the flower buds on the crabapples near my office have opened, but most are closed.
Crabapples near my office, May 6, 2015
Crabapples south of Amos Eaton, May 6, 2015
Norway maple, 13th and People, May 6, 2015
Birch, May 6, 2015
The red maples have little leaves above the samaras.
A few of the flower buds on the crabapples near my office have opened, but most are closed.
Crabapples near my office, May 6, 2015
Crabapples south of Amos Eaton, May 6, 2015
Norway maple, 13th and People, May 6, 2015
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Spring is popping out all over
Every time I turn around, more leaves and flowers have come out.
Sunday, driving on 87, I saw aspen trees that looked green, the same small, light green that was showing on the Norway maples. On the Norway maples, it was a combination of flowers and baby leaves. I don't know what it was on the aspens.
Sunday evening when I went to campus, the serviceberry, Callery pear, and magnolias were in full bloom.
Monday morning when I got to campus, there were leaves on the sugar maple between Lally and Sage. I was like, "Wasn't that tree bare?"
Monday on lunch hour, there were azaleas blooming.
Monday when I walked home from work at 5pm, I smelled the flowering Miss Kim lilacs, and I was like, "Were those blooming this morning?"
Monday I saw fully formed Norway maple leaves, not the baby ones.
Norway maples, 14th Street between Jacob and Peoples, May 5, 2015
Tuesday, today, the crabapple near 14th and Hutton was in full flower, but the crabapples near my office were not yet flowering.
Crabapple near 14th and Hutton, May 5, 2015
Crabapples near my office, May 5, 2015
Crabapple south of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Crabapple near Troy Building, May 5, 2015
Most of the trees look green now. Crabapple were the first leaves to arrive, then Norway maple and ash leaf maple, but now we also have leaves on horsechestnut, cottonwood, Callery pear, serviceberry, hawthorn, Japanese maple, and Japanese tree lilac. The Japanese tree lilacs on the north side of the field have flowers too, but the ones on the south side that get less sun because they are against the building do not have flowers. There are baby leaves on linden, elm, ash, and oak.
Horsechestnut, May 5, 2015
The sugar maples vary. While the one between Lally and Sage was leafy on Sunday, others are not yet leafy. There are three sugar maples along the north side of the alumni house. The one farthest east looks decidedly leafy, though the leaves are still on the small side. The two to the west, and also one just around the corner from them on the west side look primarily bare, with just a bit of something opening up. The one on the west side that is farther south is farther along.
The barer sugar maples on the north side of the alumni house, May 5, 2015
From a distance the silver maple is green so you think it's baby leaves, but it's actually samaras. Red maple is also mainly samaras, with the beginning of baby leaves.
May 5, 2015: I have been acquainted with this tree near 14th and Eagle for several years, but I haven't pinpointed the species. I think it is some sort of red maple cultivar.
Dogwood and ailanthus have just the beginnings of leaves.
The sycamore east of Sage looks bare, but the sycamores between Lally and VCC have baby leaves.
The locusts look mostly bare. Some have just the beginning of leaves, while others don't.
Birch trees have fresh green catkins.
Some weeping cherries have already lost their flowers.
Weeping cherry at 13th and Peoples, May 1, 2015
Many of the regular lilacs, especially the one by the east end of Sage, have leaves and big purple buds, but the flowers have not opened yet. There are some open lilac flowers on the south side of Amos Eaton.
Lilac flowers, south side of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Lilac leaves, south side of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Sunday, driving on 87, I saw aspen trees that looked green, the same small, light green that was showing on the Norway maples. On the Norway maples, it was a combination of flowers and baby leaves. I don't know what it was on the aspens.
Sunday evening when I went to campus, the serviceberry, Callery pear, and magnolias were in full bloom.
Monday morning when I got to campus, there were leaves on the sugar maple between Lally and Sage. I was like, "Wasn't that tree bare?"
Monday on lunch hour, there were azaleas blooming.
Monday when I walked home from work at 5pm, I smelled the flowering Miss Kim lilacs, and I was like, "Were those blooming this morning?"
Monday I saw fully formed Norway maple leaves, not the baby ones.
Norway maples, 14th Street between Jacob and Peoples, May 5, 2015
Tuesday, today, the crabapple near 14th and Hutton was in full flower, but the crabapples near my office were not yet flowering.
Crabapple near 14th and Hutton, May 5, 2015
Crabapples near my office, May 5, 2015
Crabapple south of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Crabapple near Troy Building, May 5, 2015
Most of the trees look green now. Crabapple were the first leaves to arrive, then Norway maple and ash leaf maple, but now we also have leaves on horsechestnut, cottonwood, Callery pear, serviceberry, hawthorn, Japanese maple, and Japanese tree lilac. The Japanese tree lilacs on the north side of the field have flowers too, but the ones on the south side that get less sun because they are against the building do not have flowers. There are baby leaves on linden, elm, ash, and oak.
Horsechestnut, May 5, 2015
The sugar maples vary. While the one between Lally and Sage was leafy on Sunday, others are not yet leafy. There are three sugar maples along the north side of the alumni house. The one farthest east looks decidedly leafy, though the leaves are still on the small side. The two to the west, and also one just around the corner from them on the west side look primarily bare, with just a bit of something opening up. The one on the west side that is farther south is farther along.
The barer sugar maples on the north side of the alumni house, May 5, 2015
From a distance the silver maple is green so you think it's baby leaves, but it's actually samaras. Red maple is also mainly samaras, with the beginning of baby leaves.
May 5, 2015: I have been acquainted with this tree near 14th and Eagle for several years, but I haven't pinpointed the species. I think it is some sort of red maple cultivar.
Dogwood and ailanthus have just the beginnings of leaves.
The sycamore east of Sage looks bare, but the sycamores between Lally and VCC have baby leaves.
The locusts look mostly bare. Some have just the beginning of leaves, while others don't.
Birch trees have fresh green catkins.
Some weeping cherries have already lost their flowers.
Weeping cherry at 13th and Peoples, May 1, 2015
Many of the regular lilacs, especially the one by the east end of Sage, have leaves and big purple buds, but the flowers have not opened yet. There are some open lilac flowers on the south side of Amos Eaton.
Lilac flowers, south side of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Lilac leaves, south side of Amos Eaton, May 5, 2015
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Signs of spring
The forsythia blossomed on Sunday, April 19.
I first saw leaves on the crabapple trees on Monday, April 20, but I did not see the crabapple trees April 17-19, so the first day of leaves could have been any time April 17-20.
Around that same time, leaves came out on the barberry.
That was the time when many signs of spring started coming out, except of course the red maples and silver maples were earlier.
Right now, on April 30, we have:
April 19: Forsythia
April 20: Crabapple
April 23: crabapple
April 23: red maple
April 23: magnolia
April 29: forsythia
April 29: ash leaf maple
April 30: weeping cherry
April 30: view of Troy, with Norway maples in foreground
April 30: Norway maple
April 30: Norway maple
April 30: ash leaf maple
I first saw leaves on the crabapple trees on Monday, April 20, but I did not see the crabapple trees April 17-19, so the first day of leaves could have been any time April 17-20.
Around that same time, leaves came out on the barberry.
That was the time when many signs of spring started coming out, except of course the red maples and silver maples were earlier.
Right now, on April 30, we have:
- Red maple and silver maple flowering enthusiastically.
- Norway maple flowering enthusiastically and showing the beginnings of tiny leaves. From a distance, Norway maples are clearly green.
- Ash leaf maples are also clearly green from a distance, and their leaves are farther along than the Norway maple leaves.
- Sugar maple and oak are just showing swelling buds.
- Locust, linden, dogwood, and sycamore still look barren.
- Ash has flowers and the beginning of leaves.
- Cherry has been flowering enthusiastically since last week.
- Magnolia has been showing big pink buds since last week, and some of those buds are beginning to open into flowers now, for trees in south-facing locations.
- Lilacs have purple buds and green baby leaves.
- Japanese tree lilacs are green from a distance.
- Callery pear downtown were flowering enthusiastically yesterday, but the one near my office was not as far along today, though it did have small flowers.
April 19: Forsythia
April 20: Crabapple
April 23: crabapple
April 23: red maple
April 23: magnolia
April 28: magnolia
April 28: Norway maple
April 29: forsythia
April 29: ash leaf maple
April 30: cherry
April 30: weeping cherry
April 30: view of Troy, with Norway maples in foreground
April 30: Norway maple
April 30: Norway maple
April 30: ash leaf maple
Sunday, May 11, 2014
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