ru: (strange)
[personal profile] ru
I came to a conclusion yesterday about gymnosperms (the group in the plant kingdom that includes pines, firs, and other like-minded sorts): They are the crotchety old geezers of the vascular plant world (nonvascular things being stuff like moss and pond scum). They're older than the much more prevalent flowering plants, and more importantly, they're prickly bastards. Getting them into jars for class yesterday was an exercise in touching them without really touching them, as doing so resulted in being attacked by needle-y leaves and spiky cones and prickly stems and other things that do their darndest to draw blood. It was almost like they were saying, "You damn kid! Leave me the hell alone before I find some way to cause you to trip and fall on me and stab you several times through the chestular region! No, don't put me near the orchids! Argh, damn you flowers--in my day we didn't have fancy stuff like petals and fruit! We had it HARD. We had to WORK to climb up the evolutionary chain, and we did it. Uphill. Both ways. In the snow. AND WE LIKED IT."

While ginkgos qualify as gymnosperms, they're obviously not prickly. They don't need to be. They're secure in knowing they'll eventually take over the world.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-11-16 09:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foofasaurus.livejournal.com
I want a ginkgo tree SO SO SO bad. But a) if I get one, I want to find someplace that can get me an older one because I am too impatient to start with a sapling XD and b) I'm not sure if they'd do well here, because I can't recall seeing any around.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-11-17 07:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] peppermintberry.livejournal.com
*grin* Yeah, I do like them too. I'm hoping we'll be able to put one in when we start redoing the backyard. They do seem to be hard to locate in nurseries, though--there's only one that I've been to that offered some decent-sized trees.

From what I found from poking around, they'll grow in zones 3-8, and are pretty hardy, being tolerant of urban conditions and all, so I think you should be able to grow them without too much trouble.

I have noticed, though, that they are very good at blending into the landscape--more than once I've passed an area several times before noticing the distinctive shape of a ginkgo tree and going "OH. What are you doing there? You weren't there before." So there may be some around you that are hiding in plain sight (it's all part of their master plan XD).

(no subject)

Date: 2006-11-17 05:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liich.livejournal.com
oh, those conifers are EVIL! they like to stab my poor little sensitive finger tips and make them bleed and sting for so long.

as for ginkgos....did you know that they're pretty much extinct in the wild. (as opposed to those specifically planted by humans...even the 1000s of years old ones.) poor ginkgos. they're beautiful. darn it that they take over 100 years to develop a full crown.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-11-17 07:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] peppermintberry.livejournal.com
Yeah, it's pretty amazing that they've survived for as long as they have, especially when the rest of the family has gone extinct. I seem to recall reading/hearing somewhere that they were first rediscovered in some temples in China. And I would love to see some more fully-grown ones; the only one I've seen was one I saw when we visited DC last year, and it was *gorgeous*.

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