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The Tulip Poplar Leaf | What Does a Tulip Poplar Leaf Look Like?

Here is what the Tulip Poplar leaf looks like.

The tulip poplar tree is known by quite a few common names. Some of which are:

  • Tuliptree
  • Tulip Magnolia
  • Yellow Poplar and
  • Whitewood

Each refers to the same tree. The tulip poplar is not a poplar, but a member of the magnolia family. The leaves resemble the shape of the outline of a tulip flower. They turn yellow in the fall.

Help your students See the Trees™ with the Leaf Critters®.
Click here for a printable  Order Form for Current Collections

Or check out the brochure here.

The Redbud Leaf | What Does a Redbud Leaf Look Like?

Here is what the Redbud leaf looks like.

There are many varieties of the redbud tree in North America. Some have green leaves in the spring and some have red leaves from spring-to-fall. The Ruby falls weeping redbud has leaves emerge maroon-red color turning into a deeper shade of violet as summer progresses. The redbud tree flowers before the leaves emerge.

Help your students See the Trees™ with the Leaf Critters®.
Click here for a printable Order Form for Current Collections

Or check out the brochure here.

The Oak Leaf | What Does an Oak Leaf Look Like?

Here is what the Red Oak leaf looks like.

There are dozens of oak tree varieties in North America. The varieties are divided into two main categories: red oaks and white oaks but I’ll throw in a two additional categories as well! Here’s a quick list along with some of their common traits:

  1. Red Oaks – have many lobes and jagged edges
  2. White Oaks – have many lobes that are curvy
  3. Willow Oak – has slender, oval shape
  4. Evergreen Oaks – have a plain oval-shaped, smooth shape

With all those differently shaped leaves, you might wonder what these trees share in common? — Acorns! They each bear acorns as their fruit. The first two oaks on this list burst into different colors in the fall – from copper, to yellow, to bright red, and brown depending on the species as well as the weather. The willow oak’s leaves turn brown. The fourth category of oak stays green all year long.

Help your students See the Trees™ with the Leaf Critters®.
Click here for a printable Order Form for Current Collections

Or check out the brochure here.

National Arbor Day, Trees, & Leaf Critters

Oakster arms out 300x300pngThe official National Arbor Day for this year was April 29, 2016. That was on a Friday! Do you know that we have a US national tree?

Q:  Do you know what the national tree is?

A: The oak. (That’s me!)

So many of the trees in your area are changing color with their leaves. See if you can take a picture of some changing leaves and post them here – then we’ll try to figure out what tree type they’re growing on.

Thanks!

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