Friday, January 30, 2026

Yellowwood - Cladrastis kentuckea

Fabaceae - Bean Family
"A Year With the Trees" - Tree Number 30
Yellowwood

Cladrastis kentuckea

January 30, 2026
Check out this post to see pictures of this tree in all four seasons.

Spring



This tree is identified by its alternately compounded, 8-12 inch leaves. There may be 7-11 leaflets per leaf that are elliptical to ovate and 3-4 inches long each. The flowers are out in May. These flowers have been called the most beautiful tree flowers in the American Forests.  The flowers do not appear every year; just every 2-5 years.


The Yellowwood Tree in May at the North Carolina Arboretum
The Yellowwood Sign by the Yellowwood Tree at the North Carolina Arboretum

Summer


Yellowwood Tree at the Botanical Gardens of Asheville in June

My daughter and I  measured the Botanical Gardens tree for the Asheville Tree map a few years ago. We found our tape measure showed that three trunks all emerged from the base.  At 4 1/2 feet from the earth, we had three trunk measurements of 55 inches, 44 inches, and 37 inches.  I had planned to post this info on the website for the Asheville Tree Map.
The Asheville Tree Map is not active anymore.  We now have in the City of Asheville a Urban Forester. I will be reaching out to him to see if there in a new Asheville Tree Map that we are able to enter data about trees.

Fall 
The Yellowwood Tree

The Yellowwood Tree

This tree lives at the Asheville Botanical Gardens in the meadow over the green bridge near the Gazebo. It is so beautiful in the fall light. I could hear the seed pods today blowing in the cool breeze, it was the sound of fall's music.  www.ashevillebotanicalgardens.org

Winter


Yellowwood tree 

You can always identify this tree in the winter by seeing the dried pods hanging from the limbs and the smooth light-colored bark.

Yellowwood tree and the yellow-bellied sapsucker
photo by http://www.robertpriddyphoto.com/

This Yellowwood tree and yellow-bellied sapsucker both live at the Asheville Botanical Gardens.  www.ashevillebotanicalgardens.org



For the love of the trees,
Becky



Monday, January 26, 2026

January 2026

A Year With the Trees - 2026

Box Elder drawing by  Brooke Priddy Conrad

"And now let us welcome the new year; full of things that have never been."  Rainer Maria Rilke


The 93 trees of "A Year With the Trees" have been a big part of this journey since 2010. Each tree was sought out and found, offering a chance to sit quietly in its presence. From the network of veins in a leaf to the patterns of the bark and the land where each tree lives, every detail has a story to tell.

Up in the branches, birds and wildlife find a place to live and move. These trees change with the seasons: the bare branches of winter eventually give way to the new green growth of spring. Summer brings a fullness of life that slowly turns into the changing colors of fall. In the sunlight, the leaves turn to shades of gold, brown, red, and yellow. Even when the leaves fall to the ground and the branches are bare again, there is a quiet waiting for the new growth to return in the spring.

Visiting and journaling these 93 trees through every season reveals that there is always more to learn about them. It is a rewarding experience to walk through the woods, down a street, or in a park and recognize the trees as familiar friends. Developing this connection provides a sense of peace.

Beyond their beauty, trees are essential for life. We can breathe clean air and drink clean water because we live on the same planet with them. Their roots hold the soil in place, and their branches provide homes for birds, small mammals, moths, and butterflies. We share an interconnected world, and trees are its quiet protectors. 

"A Year With the Trees" was started as a way to share how to get to know the trees. Whether you are following along with all 93 or just getting to know a single tree in your neighborhood, these amazing Southern Appalachian trees have much to share with anyone who takes the time to look.

When one has an appreciation and gratitude for trees, one will naturally be led to protect and care for them.


Drawing by Rebecca Priddy


There is a journal booklet I created with the help of my husband, Robert and my daughter, Brooke Conrad.  I wanted to make this journal to help others get to know these trees.  I am editing it now to be able to hopefully put it online and/or  in printed form.  I will update this post when I get these journal booklets ready.  In the meantime, have fun out there in nature.  

For the love of the trees,

Rebecca


How Do Trees Inspire Me?


How do trees inspire me?

The PawPaw flower

Trees inspire me to be grateful for this moment,
to pause and see the beauty as a bud turns into flower.


Carolina Silverbell

Trees inspire me to learn their names.
To explore all the different colors , flowers and fruits they wear each season.

Black Locust Flowers
Trees inspire me to do share with others that we are all one sharing one planet.


Peace,


Rebecca

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Persimmon - Diospyros virginiana

Ebenaceae - Ebony Family
"A Year With the Trees" - Tree Number 24
Persimmon
Diospyros virginiana


The word Diospyros means "the fruit of the gods" in ancient Greek.

Spring


Persimmon Tree in the Spring
The green is very vibrant in the early morning spring light.
This tree lives at the Asheville Botanical Gardens.
http://www.ashevillebotanicalgardens.org/.

Persimmon Flower.  Thank you to Wikimedia commons for the use of this beautiful persimmon flower .   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Persimmon_0375.jpg
This is a female Persimmon flower.  Both female and male flowers grow on the Persimmon tree.

Summer


Persimmon leaf teas have been used for many years in China, Japan, and in Korea.  These teas have been said to have numerous health benefits.  Benefits to health include improving blood lipid values, skin health, colon health, and many other health benefits have been reported as far back at 1000 years.
Persimmon fruit growing in the summertime
Fall

Persimmon fruit growing in West Virginia in the fall.  Photo by Robert Priddy

Persimmon in the fall.
The fruit before it ripens is very astringent.  I wanted to know what that meant, astringent.  So, I tasted a a persimmon back in June when the fruit was green.  I discovered what astringent means.  It means every single drop of moisture in your mouth is sucked out.  I had the driest mouth I ever had in my whole life.  So, today, needless to say, I was a bit skeptical to try and taste this now ripe fruit.  I have heard it said, not to eat the persimmon until they start to fall from the tree.  For, then and only then, are they ripe.  Well, today, on my walk about, there were persimmons on the ground.

So, I picked one up off the ground and I felt the persimmon.  It was quite soft.  I smelled the persimmon, I did notice a sweet-like scent, that was new to me.  After touching and smelling, I decided to taste.  I bit into the soft flesh of the persimmon fruit.  I was so amazed at what I tasted.  The fruit was so sweet, like a heavenly date-like nectar.  I had to taste more.  They were all a gift from the tree.  I thanked the tree and will be sure to go back tomorrow for another taste of heaven.
May you all find a persimmon tree on just the right fall day
Winter


Persimmon Tree that lives at the Asheville Botanical Gardens
The bark of the Persimmon tree is distinctive with a dark deeply-fissured, rectangular blocks.  The Persimmon tree is native to the eastern US.

From Wikipedia:  "In philosophy, the painting of persimmons by Mu Qi (13th Century) exemplifies the progression from youth to age as a symbol of the progression from bitterness to sweetness. The persimmon when young is bitter and inedible, but as it ages it becomes sweet and beneficial to humankind. Thus, as we age, we overcome rigidity and prejudice and attain compassion and sweetness. Mu Qi's painting of six persimmons (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Persimmons) is considered a masterpiece."


For the love of the trees,

Rebecca


Friday, January 23, 2026

The Apple tree and a poem


Apple Tree

“There is a pleasure in
the pathless woods,
There is a rapture on the
lonely shore,
There is society, where
none intrudes,
By the deep sea, and
music in its roar:
I love not man the less,
but Nature more.”
-Lord Byron






For the love of the trees,
Rebecca


Eastern Red Cedar - Juniperus virginiana - A Year With the Trees, tree number 23

Cupressaceae - Cypress Family
"A Year With the Trees" - Tree Number 23
Eastern Red Cedar
Juniperus virginiana

Eastern red cedar is actually not a cedar. It is a juniper. The red cedar is the most common native conifer in the Eastern United States. Its seeds are spread by cedar waxwings and other birds that eat the blue seed cones. The berries are so blue!

Spring

Juniperus virginiana
The small pink flowers on the Red Cedar will turn into a blue berry-like cone.

This next image is a Red Cedar tree with a Rust Gall.  These are quite interesting.  These do not harm the Cedar tree; yet they are cause much havoc to apple and crab apple trees.

Cedar Apple Rust
These trees are so important to the birds in the winter. The berry-like cones provide food during the winter months. Cedar waxwings, American Robin, Northern Bobwhite, Turkey, Starling, Mourning Dove, Northern Mockingbird, Purple Finch, American Crow, Northern Flicker, Downy Woodpecker, and the Eastern Bluebird all eat the berry-like cones of this tree. If you want birds to come visit where you live, plant these trees and enjoy.

Summer

Eastern Red Cedar - Juniperus virginiana
The Red Cedar is important to wildlife, it is beautiful, and it lives a very long time (400 plus years). The berries (cones) on this tree are colorful and used in herbal medicine as well as providing food for birds. The bark is colorful, interesting, and smells wonderful.

This Juniperus virginiana tree is filled with blue berry-like female cones.
Fall

Juniperus virginiana in September in Arkansas

Winter

I took these winter images today,  the evergreen foliage stays on the cedar tree all winter long.  This Eastern Red Cedar lives at Priddy Woods, and is my favorite Cedar tree.  It faces the sunset and just shines with light through its boughs every evening.  I am grateful for the peace I always feel when I watch the sunset through the branches where he light is caught in each little green whorled stem.   






For the love of the trees,
Becky


A Year With the Trees project. What is the tree blog all about anyway?

Cercis canadensis,  Red Bud, Fruit This blog is about the trees that are native to the Southern Appalachians.  It is a collection of pho...