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Posted

In hedgerow, chalk down in Wiltshire. Distinctive furrowed grey bark.

 

I was thinking Huntington Elm?

 

Ulmus x hollandica 'vegeta'

 

Any ideas?

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Posted

The leaves looked more elongated and more oblique at the base than english. The leaf surface neither rough nor smooth. Could well be a hybrid.

Posted
The leaves looked more elongated and more oblique at the base than english. The leaf surface neither rough nor smooth. Could well be a hybrid.

 

neither rough nor smooth? got to be 1 or the other.

Posted

Elms that size here in West Sussex ( up the east wall in West dean Estate ) are exactly like that in the bark . They are suffering with DED

Posted

Corky wings are standard on the English Elm strain. Leaves can vary depending on local growing conditions but it may be a hybrid with another U.minor. Less likely to be a hybrid with U.glabra as the leaves do not look as big as this usually produces.

 

Alec

Posted

<neither rough nor smooth? got to be 1 or the other.>

 

Why? Surface metrology and degrees of roughness can be measured on a sliding scale.

 

So it can be defined as a unit such as Ra, or a friction coefficient

 

If the surface falls between two exremes such as rough and smooth then it cannot be defined explicitly, as one or the other.

Posted

Many thanks, I was looking at shape and petiole size. I guess me using the bark as a gauge for Elm species was not a good method for distinction.

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