Diggin'It Blog
Return to Gardening

These ginkgo trees have turned to a brilliant fall yellow.

(Dave Darnell /NEWSCOM)

Photos (1 of 1)

Ginkgo trees are beautiful in autumn

By Donna Williamson | 11.06.09

Photo courtesy of Donna Williamson.

Ginkgo trees have attractive and distinctive leaves.


It’s one of those blue-sky days in Virginia, rare and exquisite - a perfect day to check on the ginkgo grove at the State Arboretum of Virginia at Blandy Experimental Farm in Boyce.

For weeks, I have swung by there, watching the slow departure of chlorophyll from the leaves of the ginkgo trees. While not so noticeable at other times of the year, the autumn show is spectacular.

Ginkgoes are among the most beautiful trees for the landscape. The leaf shapes are lovely, and they grow very well in my climate. They don’t attract diseases or pests and have the handy habit of dropping their leaves almost all at once.

Some of the forms, such as Princeton Sentry, are large shade trees while distinctly upright. Others, like Jade Butterflies, are dwarfs, getting only 12 feet tall in 10 years, perfect for most one-story homes.

Most folks select male ginkgoes for their landscapes, since female ginkgoes develop nuts with a fleshy outer covering that is pretty stinky. One year when I was a docent at Blandy, we went out and collected these fruit for a demonstration by Asian experts. It didn’t seem like an appealing food to me, but it’s treasured by some.

I wish I had remembered that event earlier in the day. My dog Lucy needed a good walk, so she came along as I took photos, and she found it delightful to roll in the stinky, fleshy coverings of the fallen ginkgo nuts. Of course she did. Dogs love to roll in stinky things that smell perfectly awful. She was so proud!

The ride home was breezy with all the windows open.

Of course, I won’t remember this next year when I am watching to see the ginkgoes go yellow.

Instead, I will think, What a great day to take the dog to the arboretum for a walk. There won’t be  a thought in my head except, With a blue sky like this, the ginkgoes must be fabulous. And they will be.

Donna Williamson is a master gardener, garden designer, and garden coach. She has taught gardening and design classes at the State Arboretum of Virginia, Oatlands in Leesburg, and Shenandoah University. She’s also the founder and editor of Grandiflora Mid-Atlantic Gardening magazine, and the author of “The Virginia Gardener’s Companion: An Insider’s Guide to Low Maintenance Gardening in Virginia.”  She lives in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.

Editor’s note: To read more by Donna, check our blog archive. For other Monitor gardening content, see our main gardening page and our RSS feed.

You may also want to visit Gardening With the Monitor on Flickr. Take part in the discussions and get answers to your gardening questions. If you join the group (it’s free), you can upload your garden photos and enter our contests.

<< Onions of great flavor and questionable character | Main

Comments

1. Banzel | 11.06.09

“Switch day”, as we call the day all the leaves drop, was yesterday, following the third frost of the season. It is fun to watch the day-long drizzle of leaves raining down from the 165-year old behemoth on our street.

Unfortunately, it will take fifteen or twenty years from planting a gingko to knowing if yours is just beautiful, or if it’s visually beautiful but olfactorily horrifying. Some of them drop ground-coating scads of crabapple-like fruits (just before switch-day) that make rotten eggs seem like lilacs by comparison.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

4. uberVU - social comments | 11.06.09

Leave a Comment

  By clicking "Submit Comment", you agree to our Terms of Service.

We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.

Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.

Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.

Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.