EDDIE SEAGLE: Landscape season happens each month

Published 8:00 am Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Eddie Seagle is a Sustainability Verifier, Golf Environment Organization (Scotland), Agronomist and Horticulturalist, CSI: Seagle (Consulting Services International) LLC, Professor Emeritus and Honorary Alumnus (Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College), Distinguished Professor for Teaching and Learning (University System of Georgia) and Short Term Missionary (Heritage Church, Moultrie). Direct inquiries to csi_seagle@yahoo.com.

“Summer has always been my favorite season. I feel happier.” Zooey Deschanel. “Summer afternoon, summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language.” Henry James. “And so with the sunshine and the great bursts of leaves growing on the trees, just as things grow in fast movies, I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.” F. Scott Fitzgerald. “Live in the sunshine. Swim in the sea. Drink in the wild air.” Ralph Waldo Emerson.

The trifecta months of June, July and August have begun and summer is officially just around the corner. Landscape season happens each month of the year. In order to make informed choices, plan ahead while familiarizing yourself with specific plants and their needs. Let’s begin this week with the river birch.

The river birch (Betula nigra or water birch) is native to the eastern and southern United States and is a deciduous tree commonly found in the flood plains and swamp areas. The bark of the river birch is very distinctive, thus making it a favored ornamental tree for landscape uses. Its bark is usually dark gray-brown to pinkish-brown and scaly. And in some situations it appears smooth and creamy pinkish-white with exfoliating curly papery sheets. The flowers are wind-pollinated catkins with the male as pendulous and the female as erect. The fruit matures in the late spring and consists of numerous tiny winged seeds positioned between the catkin bracts.

The river birch is well-known for its peeling, paper-like bark. The cinnamon-colored, exfoliating bark of the river birch is awesome in appearance during the winter months (fall leaf color is golden yellow). During the growing season it exhibits lustrous, medium-green leaves (silvery white underneath) and tolerates wet soils and dry summers. It does not tolerate shade and prefers slightly acid to neutral and moist soil conditions. The river birch is the most common birch tree found in our area since most birch species prefer the cooler climates to the north. It is a fast-growing tree but its life is short compared to most trees.

The bark of the river birch varies according to its age as young trees have a silvery gray bark with light reddish-brown patches and the older trees have dark reddish-brown bark (almost black). It has two different flowers with the male flowers growing in the fall, remaining on the tree through the winter, and producing pollen in the early spring. The female flowers grow in the spring and turn into fruit in May and June (cone filled with hairy seeds) after pollination and are dispersed by wind and water. The ripening of seed coincides with high water levels of rivers (its native setting) thus allowing the seed to be carried long distances by the water. The seed germinates quickly in the mud thus allowing it to grow in areas where it helps prevent erosion.

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In such natural settings, the river birch usually grows close to water and is often found on sandbars, islands in streams, streambanks, lakeshores, and floodplains. Other trees found growing in nature in the vicinity of the river birch include American sycamore, red maple, silver maple, black willow, American hornbeam, yellow poplar, blackgum, black cherry, American elm, sugar maple, boxelder, mockernut hickory, American beech, ash, sweetgum, and pin oak.

The river birch is one of the most recognizable and beautiful trees in the landscape. It sheds its bark constantly which drops underneath the tree as a beneficial mulch thus preventing aggressive competition from weeds and other unwanted plants. It is much more resilient and heat tolerant than the white paper birch and is very popular for landscaping on estates, golf courses, metropolitan locations, small business locations, recreational areas, parks, and homes. The river birch is a very popular lawn tree which thrives easily in hot, humid locations and exhibits the attractive peeling bark feature. As one of the fastest growing and outstanding shade trees, it can offer energy savings through temperature control thus lowering your electricity bill as an added bonus. 

The river birch can be purchased as a multi-trunk shade tree, although the single trunk specimens are most preferred.  It can be used as a screen or shade tree, and as a street tree with irrigation. They are attractive when planted in groupings, especially against a dark background. Because of its shallow root system, the river birch is easy to transplant. It should be pruned during the summer to minimize excessive sap bleeding which can result from spring pruning. 

The cultivars include Cully (a broad pyramidal with lighter bark than the species and large, glossy green leaves offering a good resistance to bronze birch borer) and Heritage (a heat-tolerant, highly adaptive cultivar with larger, glossier leaves). The Royal Horticultural Society labels Cully as Heritage and is sold under the name of Heritage even though many distinguish it as an independent cultivar.

Heritage received a Pennsylvania Horticulture Society Gold Medal in 1990 and was selected as 2002 Tree of the Year by the Society of Municipal Arborists. The bark of Heritage is whiter than any birch resistant to bronze birch borer. Heritage offers many positive traits including a cold tolerance in northern environments and a tolerance to the heat of the southern environments. 

Other cultivars include City Slicker (exfoliating bark reveals creamy white inner bark), Duraheat (glossy dark green, closely spaced leaves with yellow fall color, aphid resistant, and bark exfoliation at early age), Fox Valley (a dense, compact, oval to rounded habit with branches to the ground and dense foliage), Royal Frost (burgundy-red to purple foliage, followed by yellow-orange to red fall color with white inner bark), Shiloh Splash (variegated leaf with green foliage edged in creamy white) and Suwanee (lustrous dark green leaves with salmon white exfoliating bark). Also, Heritage and Duraheat are recognized as being tolerant of the bronze birch borer (Agrilus anxius) in warmer areas of the southeast. Avoid selections that exhibit growth patterns not consistent with the species including variegated leaves and weeping growth habits.

Welcome the first day of summer on June 21. Happy Summer to all!

“Christ was sacrificed once to take away the sins of many people; and He will appear a second time, not to bear sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for Him.” Hebrews 9:28. “Encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.” 1 Thessalonians 5:11. “The Sovereign Lord is my strength; He makes my feet like the feet of a deer, He enables me to go on the heights.” Habakkuk 3:19. “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of His hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night they display knowledge.” Psalm 19:1-2.

Eddie Seagle is a Sustainability Verifier, Golf Environment Organization (Scotland), Agronomist and Horticulturalist, CSI: Seagle (Consulting Services International) LLC, Professor Emeritus and Honorary Alumnus (Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College), Distinguished Professor for Teaching and Learning (University System of Georgia) and Short Term Missionary (Heritage Church, Moultrie). Direct inquiries to csi_seagle@yahoo.com.