top of page

Tulip Poplar

  • Writer: gregsthings
    gregsthings
  • May 18, 2021
  • 1 min read

While driving around our hill to go home we noticed these flowers laying on the ground. As long as I have lived here I have never ever seen these before. My cousin found oit the name for us so we looked it up this is what we found

Liriodendron tulipifera—known as the tulip tree, American tulip tree, tulipwood, tuliptree, tulip poplar, whitewood, fiddletree, and yellow-poplar—is the North American representative of the two-speciesgenusLiriodendron (the other member is Liriodendron chinense), and the tallest eastern hardwood. It is native to eastern North America from Southern Ontario and possibly southern Quebec to Illinois eastward to southwestern Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and south to central Florida and Louisiana. It can grow to more than 50 m (160 ft) in virgin cove forests of the Appalachian Mountains, often with no limbs until it reaches 25–30 m (80–100 ft) in height, making it a very valuable timbertree.





 
 
 

Comments


  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
bottom of page