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Lots of trees to identify! Any help appreciated


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Hello everyone, I have a garden with a bunch of trees in it many of these have TPOs however the TPO view is from the 1970s and the locations look wrong. So I would like to identify the larger trees and see if I can relate it to what it is there. There are quite a few, so any help at all would be appreciated!

 

Tree1:

 

IMG_2319.thumb.jpeg.98c6b610e2818c2c27b5a00f7d73d3f3.jpegIMG_2318.thumb.jpeg.062905e6bb986b1e2ce134d40e268015.jpegIMG_2317.thumb.jpeg.b1087fc6277d49dd0ac9632637878e21.jpegIMG_2316.thumb.jpeg.7d8edf5ac3dbae69d7e3404cdc6d5761.jpeg

 

Tree 2:

 

IMG_2322.thumb.jpeg.8564360db2bbc82f6203a6d8d534e47a.jpegIMG_2321.thumb.jpeg.f50ef54c264c2b7c78bfb5d3da911be6.jpegIMG_2320.thumb.jpeg.8af403dbb778bc01330c8f9e98259cda.jpeg

IMG_2323.thumb.jpeg.3fd3a8a78af914754525d0123151d721.jpeg

 

Tree 3:

 

IMG_2326.thumb.jpeg.1033b7493d4dbc0f5e87c8a51ab0684e.jpegIMG_2325.thumb.jpeg.b48457ddc2dbec08e193efcd0c71306f.jpegIMG_2324.thumb.jpeg.f84e32921c38d343ecb2fd83962afc55.jpeg

 

Tree 4

 

IMG_2328.thumb.jpeg.ccd264d781d4fd2b0951267ef8e59b39.jpegIMG_2327.thumb.jpeg.9c3add2aa4c19a9f1f2973ac7f32fc9d.jpeg

 

Tree 5

 

IMG_2330.thumb.jpeg.87055228a792a1845060a0a94fecec3d.jpegIMG_2329.thumb.jpeg.bcc4dabce09dab8430c21c07e061fe9d.jpeg

 

Tree 6:

 

IMG_2332.thumb.jpeg.0b4ca9315bf0f2dd6b8fcca4dc24df79.jpegIMG_2331.thumb.jpeg.da2825b014c4b8290742e77518e7f8b1.jpeg

 

Tree 7

 

IMG_2334.thumb.jpeg.dd7d43a5a62bad84b1476490ac41e20a.jpegIMG_2333.thumb.jpeg.e056f019e6b3fa979c5178d152e4126d.jpeg

 

Tree 8:

 

IMG_2336.thumb.jpeg.d67fd7ccc5a41f993412be48911ab605.jpegIMG_2335.thumb.jpeg.694d75efb77a3af6bce8b3d9c2093e53.jpeg

 

Tree 9:

 

IMG_2339.thumb.jpeg.a2eafa2ce80230ebb507e4be0a163ac4.jpegIMG_2338.thumb.jpeg.849f001c4957fd2bea45625b5ca8f5ca.jpegIMG_2337.thumb.jpeg.c9b037d0ec3c3423599496adeea83762.jpeg

 

Tree 10:IMG_2341.thumb.jpeg.feb4a7813407b39c871383c6e3c25c10.jpegIMG_2340.thumb.jpeg.411d14c6c71a92bf1479ef21491c76bd.jpeg

 

 

And there was a tree felled well before my time here which I believe was rotton?

 

IMG_2343.thumb.jpeg.90582b058cc92f12cfce739a21addd6a.jpegIMG_2342.thumb.jpeg.d4c37149531734b11aacf90b1485b425.jpeg

 

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Thanks so much for the responses! It is really useful, I have mapped them on Google MyMaps.

 

Are there any which are particularly difficult to see, or more likely to be wrong so I can go and grab more pictures, maybe if I rip some ivy off the dead tree, we can figure out what that is!

 

The following in this area listed on the TPOs were as follows, and the bolded ones I think we have identified above:

 

SYCAMORE
LIME
SYCAMORE ( I think T7 may be the second Sycamore, as far as map position is concerned anyway )
HORSE CHESTNUT
HAWTHORN
COPPER BEECH
MALUS
CHERRY
FALSE ACACIA
LAWSON CYPRESS
LAWSON CYPRESS

ALMOND

 

 

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Quote

It is possible to tell true species apart by looking at the underside of the leaf. Common lime (Tilia x europaea) has tufts of white hairs at the end of twigs, whereas in small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata) these are rusty red. Large-leaved lime (Tilia platyphyllos) has hairs all over the underside.

Quote

Small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata Mill.) and large-leaved lime
(Tilia platyphyllos Scop.) are large-sized deciduous broad-leaved
trees. They are long-lived, able to survive more than 1 000 years
even if coppiced 1, 2 . T. cordata is the more common species in
Europe, whilst T. platyphyllos extends farther south. Both species
can reach 30-40 m in height with straight trunks up to around
1 m in diameter which are largely free of suckers and epicormic
growth, unlike their hybrid Tilia x europaea (common lime).

 

reference:

https://forest.jrc.ec.europa.eu/media/atlas/Tilia_spp.pdf

 

 Common lime i reckon with thoose suckers?

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