Tree Bark Identification - Maple, Beech, Oak
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- Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
- This is a beginner identification video that shows how to identify several common North American trees by their bark during autumn and wintertime. Identifying tree can be useful when looking for specific trees for their properties.
Today I share with you how to identify Maple, Oak and Beech. Since it's late autumn I will be using the bark of these trees as my main way of identification.
These trees are found all through eastern north america. Mainly in the maple-hickory forest biome. This series will mainly be covering the tree Families, not each species within each family.
This includes Maple, Beech, Oak, Hickory, Basswood, Ironwood, Birch, Black Cherry, White Ash and many more!
Maple: 0:53
Beech: 2:55
Oak: 4:27
Thanks for watching! Feel free to share some of the tree species that have properties useful to you!
Thanks to Adrian von Ziegler for the wonderful music =D - Хобби
Thank you! You mentioned uses; Beech tree can be used to find a highly sought after non-hallucinogenic mushroom, lions mane. I’d love more content on Beech trees!
Great video.
Was out today in the forest today. Found a basswood, Jack, Scots pine, cedar, all the usual suspects. Came across what I thought was an elm. After watching, this vid, it may also be a beech! Such similar leaf!
I just don't understand why There are no evergreen broadleaf trees in North America, even in the southern United States?
The large tree at 4:56 looks like a hickory to me, but I could be wrong. Nice work on the video, very informative.
love plants
Thanks, you just built my log cabin
That was a helpful video. Really easy to follow! Thanks! Keep it up.
Thanks a lot for watching! If you guys have any advice when it comes to tree identification let me know! I would also love to hear some of your uses for different tree species!
I just don't understand why there are no evergreen broadleaf trees in North America, even in the southern United States? Why most broadleaf trees in North America are deciduous?
Great Video! Thank you for this...
The song is Fable by Adrian von Ziegler. =)
Good identifications!
Thank you!
Good vid man :)
good vedo. i like 2-3 trees over 20 tree vedios. black walnut, stage bark hickory, cheery next.
Thank you.
You never showed a full grown oak tree bark. A sapling tells us very little.
I just don't know why most broadleaf trees in North America are deciduous?
Thank you sir
thank you
Top 💪
Someone mentioned it below as well but there was no full grown Oak featured. Disappointed!
Maple ZEErup
It’s not called syrup when it first comes out of the tree 😂. You tap it to get sap and make syrup out of the sap lol.
I smoke meats 🍖 always looking to identify local usable wood sources
🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒
I would have found this video more helpful if you only focused on tree bark instead of using nuts and leaves as assistance. I am going out in March to identify trees and I thought that is how the video would focus based on the title.
I just don't understand why There are no evergreen broadleaf trees in North America, even in the southern United States?
Hollies and magnolias are some
@@shrek1770 But in Canada and United States the forests mostly are deciduous trees or coniferous trees!
What no...no full grown oak nooo ayhhya no ohhGeeod AAAHHhhhhh
I liked the video very informative, my only advice would be maybe slow down a bit and relax when speaking but other than that good video.
I wanted to like this video, but what the heck is going on with going in and out and in and out of focus? I couldn't watch more than a minute of it because of that.