Shrub ID

g squared 23

5 year old buck +
Also came across this shrub. Will keep an eye on it and adds pictures as it leafs out. Anyone have a guess as to what this is based on the looks?

575c47686c98c4a041e5ee9fd4112447.jpg


675786782131278eeb41bda1b32dad66.jpg


1b91478e746d04b5b6ed9469d45c6dc8.jpg


ca569287e2773d8dec32739a9c417c44.jpg



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I'll take a longshot, it kind of looks like my wild plum trees.
 
Mulberry?

After looking on my big screen I think I agree with ruskbucks.
 
Last edited:
I'm looking at it on a phone screen and not wearing reading glasses so this is a wild ass guess...
Black Locust?

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
 
It does make me think of wild plum. Once the leaves come out you should be able to tell for sure. I would mark it with flagging so you don't forget where to look later.
 
I believe it may be Autumn or Russian Olive
 
I would say no to autumn olive. Bark is lighter grey and smooth at this size and it does not have all the small lenticels on the bark like this shows.
 
An easy way to ID winter dormant autumn olive is to look at last years growth. The branches will have tiny silver specks on the bark.



Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 
I know what you’re saying c-little, but the more I look at this, the more I think Tree Spud is on the right track. As I look at the example on the web-site go botany (https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/), the bark looks similar, but not identical, as you point out. But the give away to me is the “crab-claw” (my scientific term) at the end of the twig. Also, the bud arrangement looks the same to me. The bark is a bit off compared to the example shown, but I’d still lean toward autumn olive.

Of all the “invasives”, I face at my camp… European buckthorn, honeysuckle, multiflora rose, this is the least offensive. This shrub doesn’t draw blood when I walk by it, and I have found the bears love it. It’s also edible for humans too - a poor-man’s blueberry batch. Of course, you’d want to be sure this truly is an autumn olive shrub before sprinkling them on your morning cereal, but the critters do love ‘em.

autumn-olive twig.jpgG squared Twig.JPGautumn-olive bark.jpgG squared bark.JPG
 
Top