posted by [identity profile] realinterrobang.livejournal.com at 04:14am on 2005-05-08
*sigh* No, a tulip tree looks like a magnolia, at least in the local parlance, and I haven't a clue what a tulip poplar looks like. *quick Google image search* Jeez, no! Apparently the kind of poplar trees I mean are poplus canadensis, suck on that, you botanical anal-retentives! And they most assuredly do spew fluff all over hell's half acre. When they start going crazy out at my parents' house a little later in the year, I'll take Teh Norty Camrer out and get you some pictures. In bumper crop years, it looks like it's snowing cotton.

I have no idea what species the local generic maples are, but I'm sure they're not roughbark, sugar, or Japanese. Happy? :D
 
posted by [identity profile] realinterrobang.livejournal.com at 04:45am on 2005-05-08
Dangit, I keep forgetting that I live in a microclimate. It's its own separate thing...

Anyway, if you want to see poplar fluff, go here:

http://www.wisarts.com/dzis/photos/seeds_gras_sm.jpg

As Tomble opined, the stuff does actually manage to sprout seedlings in hermetically sealed flasks, as well as giving the pool filter, the eavestroughs, and the lawnmower byssinosis...
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 05:25am on 2005-05-08
Ah -- "Carolina poplar", a species I hadn't even heard of by name (though odds are I've seen 'em someplace). So I got the "not Lombardy" half of my guess correct ...

Your description explains why one web page said it was known as "the cottonwood of the plains". I wonder whether I'd be allergic to fabric woven from thread spun from poplar fluff.

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