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Introduction to Tree Identification: Native Trees

  • Yorkshire Arboretum Unnamed Road YO60 7BY (map)

Why

Tree identification often seems difficult and challenging, and can be an obstacle to fully appreciating these wonderful plants that are so important to our lives. Being able to identify them opens many doors to understanding the natural world and the wealth of cultural and biological stories each species can tell. Advocacy for trees begins with naming!

Aim

Are you interested in our native trees but feel you don’t know much about them, or how to tell them apart? In this day course John Grimshaw will introduce you to them using the collection at the Yorkshire Arboretum, teaching you about the various features to look for and some simple ways to remember them. The focus will be on species most often seen in northern England, using summer foliage characters to tell them apart.

Content

Discuss the principles of identification, and the need for names

Learn about the diversity of British native and frequently planted or naturalised broad-leaved trees

Learn some simple characters to look for, and examine a range of specimens in the classroom to become familiar with important features

Observe growing trees in the arboretum to see how details relate to the whole individual

Undertake an identification challenge in a patch of native trees

Outcomes

By the end of the workshop, you will be able to:

Confidently recognise a range of our common native trees

Find your way around a guidebook to trees

Understand and apply principles of identification to woodland trees

Share why it’s useful to be able to distinguish between trees

Interpret your local treescape and connect to individual trees

 

Useful accessories: Collins Tree Guide (Owen Johnson, 2006), 10× hand lens

Earlier Event: 18 May
Open Gardens: Weathervane House
Later Event: 22 May
Open Gardens: 5 Hall Drive