The honey locust (Gleditsia triacanthos), also known as the thorny locust or thorny honeylocust, is a deciduous tree in the family Fabaceae, native to central North America where it is mostly found in the moist soil of river valleys. The wood from this tree is often used for fence posts, railroad ties, furniture, tool handles, and fuel. The Thornless Honey Locust is a finely textured, urban-tolerant, fast-growing, and filtered shade tree. Use it as a specimen in a lawn, recreational play area, or as a street tree.
gleditsia triacanthosinermis spectrum Guillot Bourne
Get started. Find help & information on Gleditsia triacanthos f. inermis 'Sunburst' honey locust 'Sunburst' from the RHS. Gleditsia triacanthos, commonly called honey locust, is native from Pennsylvania to Iowa south to Georgia and Texas. It typically grows 60-80' (less frequently to 120') tall with a rounded spreading crown. Trunk and branches have stout thorns (to 3" long) that are solitary or three-branched. The official cultivar name is Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis 'Suncole'; it was created through selective manipulation of a thornless variation of the native species. 'Suncole' has a pyramidal shape and is somewhat shorter than the native species, growing to about 40 feet vs. the 80 feet of the native tree. Gleditsia Type: Broadleaf Native to (or naturalized in) Oregon: No Broadleaf deciduous tree, 30-70 ft (9-21 m), open, spreading crown, produces light airy shade, few if any spines (thorns) on the trunk or branches.
Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis 'Suncole' (Sunburst Honeylocust) Southern Idaho Landscape
Sunburst thornless honey-locust (Gleditsia triacanthos f. inermis 'Suncole'): New foliage emerges yellow and matures to bright green. A seedless, male cultivar. Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis 'Shademaster': 'Shademaster' Thornless Honeylocust 1. Edward F. Gilman and Dennis G. Watson 2. Introduction. Many horticulturists consider this to be one of the best cultivars of Honeylocust. Thornless Honeylocust is a deciduous native North American tree which grows 50 to 70 feet tall and almost as wide. Trees or small trees, to 45 m tall. Bark grayish black, 1-2 cm thick, with deep cracks and narrow, long ridges. Branchlets deep brown, rough, slightly sulcate, with small, orbicular lenticels. Spines deep brown, slightly flat, robust, often branched, 2.5-10 cm, rarely branchlets unarmed. Leaves pinnate or bipinnate (pinnae 4-14 pairs), 11. This tree can grow up to 80 feet tall with a single trunk 2 to 3 feet in diameter and a broad, flat-topped crown, casting light shade that allows turf grass to grow underneath. It sometimes grows in forests but is more commonly found beside roads and fields.
Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis 'Suncole' Sunburst® Honeylocust Ebert's Greenhouse
Leaves golden on new growth changing to bright green, alternate, pinnately or bipinnately compound, 15-20 cm long, pubescent rachis. Stems shining, smooth, and reddish to greenish-brown. Fruitless. Sun. Fast growing. Defoliates easily in response to temperature changes and drought. The honeylocust pod gall midge deforms leaves in some areas. For this reason, thornless honey-locust (Gleditsia triacanthos f. inermis), is most commonly sold. For the sake of species diversity, it should only be planted after careful consideration of alternatives. The species may be difficult to find in nurseries. Most nurseries will carry the thornless form.
Gleditsia triacanthos f. inermis. autumn_planting_notification.text. A capriciously growing tree with a height of 15 - 20 (25) m. It has a grey bark with shallow fissures. The twigs and the young leaves are red brown. The name f. inermis is a collective name for variou…. Read more. Gleditsia triacanthos inermis 'Imperial' - compact cultivar, maturing at 30' tall by 30' wide, with very dense shade for a Honeylocust, perhaps the best to use as a street tree. Gleditsia triacanthos inermis 'Moraine' - original thornless cultivar, maturing at 45' tall by 45' wide, having greater resistance to webworms.
Pin op Ebben multistem trees / meerstammige bomen
30 Minuten. Der Dornenlose Lederhülsenbaum 'Inermis' (Gleditsia triacanthos) ist ein schirmförmiger, malerischer Großbaum mit dekorativen, rot-braunen Hülsenfrüchte. Die hellgrünen, in Trauben angeordneten Blüten mit einem angenehm duftenden Duft erscheinen von Juni bis Juli. Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis 'Elegantissima'. Among one of the smallest growing Gleditsia, this is an attractive, compact, almost shrub-like tree with bi-pinnate leaves. Bright to mid-green leaves turn bright yellow in the autumn months before falling. Its fine foliage and shrubby habit give it a soft appearance in the garden.