Ride Report: Heritage Trees of Portland
Posted by Jonathan Maus (Editor) on June 19th, 2008 at 9:17 am
[Submitted by Emily Wilson]
Yesterday evening, just over 40 people gathered for a tour of Portland Heritage Trees in the SE (we counted off at our first tree, but for the life of me I can’t remember the number - 43? - help me out here folks…)
our first stop was a Ponticum Rhododron - bees feeding on the nectar of this plant can produce honey with a mild hallucinogenic and
laxative effect, 11 cases being documented in Istanbul in the 80’s, as the plant is native to Asia Minor - (thank you Wikipedia!) http://www.springerlink.com/content/w322484735r06208/
The rest of the tour being far more pedestrian in nature, we visited:
a Big Leaf Linden
Oregon Myrtle
Tartan Elm
European Beech and Spanish Chestnut (edible) - on the same lot
We skipped the Scarlet Oak - as it is hard to see from the street and we were a large group
Oregon White Oak - a particular native of this area
Tulip Tree - the owner came out and asked us to lobby the city to put Agnes (his name for the tree - did I remember it right folks?) on the
Heritage Tree list - I told him I found her as #280 on the list - so I thought she already was.
then on to Black Walnut - a favorite of mine as there was a huge one outside my freshman dorm widow and they turn a brilliant yellow in the
fall - my birthday season.
A big Western White Pine that was shorter than its house in pictures from the 1930’s
A stand of Northern Red Oaks around a colonial style house, built by a
very early owner of the PGE and from which Colonial Heights takes its
name
and last but certainly not least - a huge London Planetree
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