All About the Osage Orange
This tree - once a favorite of American settlers - deserves a look from modern-day homesteaders, including an extraordinary tree with a past.
This tree—once a favorite of American
settlers—deserves a look from modern-day
homesteaders
RELATED CONTENT
Have fun with sticks — transform them into useful, attractive wattle and wickets....
To protect your house, yard and driveways from blowing wind and drifts, plant rows of trees paralle...
Designing and building the perfect wood fence for your property, including planning, fence building...
Home electric fences can preserve a harvest inexpensively, including polywire, hot tape, electropla...
by Dave Wayman
"Good fences make good neighbors," wrote poet Robert Frost.
But what, exactly, makes a good fence?
If you've ever had the dubious pleasure of putting a fence
up—of cutting, splitting, and setting posts and
stretching wire—you just might answer, "A fence that
builds itself." And since you're fantasizing, you might
add, . . . and takes care of itself, too."
Well, believe it or not, there is such a fence. Chances are
you've seen one while driving along rural roads and looking
out over neat hedgerow-lined fields. During the latter half
of the nineteenth century and the first few decades of this
one-up until the time barbed wire became widely available
and inexpensive—settlers and farmers throughout much
of the eastern half of the United States planted
their fences.
More often than not, the tree they used was Osage orange,
sometimes also called prairie hedge, hedge apple, horse
apple, bowwood, or yellow-wood. Most folks today, though,
know it only for its distinctly ugly, almost
otherworldly-looking fruit: an inedible, fleshy green orb
the size of a grapefruit or large orange, with a
warty, furrowed surface sparsely covered with long, coarse
hairs. When you break the globe open, it exudes a bitter,
milky, sticky sap that eventually turns black and that
gives some people an irritating rash.
But beauty, after all, is in the eye of the
beholder, and any homesteader who places greater value on
usefulness than on appearance will find much, to admire in
the Osage orange.
AN EXTRAORDINARY TREE
Osage (Maclura pomifera) is the sole surviving
member of the genus Maclura—of its
many relatives from past geologic eras, only fossils
remain. It is also, however, a member of the family
Moraceae, which encompasses the mulberries and the figs, as
well as a large number of tropical and semitropical trees.
When mature, the Osage orange measures from 10 to 50 feet
tall and has a trunk 1 to 2 feet in diameter. Its branches
form an even, round crown, unless the trees are growing
closely together in a hedge and don't have room to spread
naturally. Between May and July, the species sports tiny
greenish flowers.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
Next >>