A
amakyonin
Guest
Veloise wrote:
> Just because northern trees don't produce "stickers" does not mean that
> I don't know what those are.
The "stickers" in Arkansas come from a grass (sandbur) and not any
trees, although there are sweet gum trees there that produce spiky "gum
balls". I don't think they can puncture a tire.
This page shows that Cenchrus spinifex is limited to the southern
states. The link to the county distributions for Arkansas shows that
his doesn't occur in Pulaski county.
http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/topics.cgi?earl=plant_profile.cgi&symbol=CESP4
While this one shows that Cenchrus longispinus covers the whole country
except for the lucky ones in Idaho. I never see any of this in West NY.
http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/topics.cgi?earl=plant_profile.cgi&symbol=CELO3
> Just because northern trees don't produce "stickers" does not mean that
> I don't know what those are.
The "stickers" in Arkansas come from a grass (sandbur) and not any
trees, although there are sweet gum trees there that produce spiky "gum
balls". I don't think they can puncture a tire.
This page shows that Cenchrus spinifex is limited to the southern
states. The link to the county distributions for Arkansas shows that
his doesn't occur in Pulaski county.
http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/topics.cgi?earl=plant_profile.cgi&symbol=CESP4
While this one shows that Cenchrus longispinus covers the whole country
except for the lucky ones in Idaho. I never see any of this in West NY.
http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/topics.cgi?earl=plant_profile.cgi&symbol=CELO3