Bradford Pears

Discussion in 'Discussion Group' started by Pepper Jack, Mar 16, 2007.

  1. Pepper Jack

    Pepper Jack Well-Known Member

    Pretty now but the next coupla nights are going to be rough on those pretty white flowers.
     
  2. elims

    elims Well-Known Member

    Supposed to be a 'hard freeze' tonite ...
     
  3. CakePrincess

    CakePrincess Well-Known Member

    This may sounds silly, but does that kind of trees grow pears? How long do their flowering blossom last? Does it have fragnance? I'm originally from FL and we have never seen one of those before.
     
  4. ready2cmyKing

    ready2cmyKing Well-Known Member

    Bradford Pears are ornamentals with beautiful but STINKY flowers. :)
     
  5. HidesinOBX

    HidesinOBX Well-Known Member

    I agree... they smell like urine to me. Pretty though!
     
  6. KDsGrandma

    KDsGrandma Well-Known Member

    They produce a small, ugly fruit that not even the birds eat. There is nothing prettier in the spring than a whole row of bradford pears in bloom, and nothing sadder looking than that same row of bradford pears after a hard freeze.
     
  7. ready2cmyKing

    ready2cmyKing Well-Known Member

  8. CakePrincess

    CakePrincess Well-Known Member

    Funny you mentioned about the smell, one day I was delivering mails to one of my customer's house, she got a row of Bradford Pear trees and the smell at her place smelled like pet's urine. How embarrassing to think it was her pets! Turned out to be her trees' smell! Ewww!
     
  9. harleygirl

    harleygirl Well-Known Member

    Luckily it doesn't last long! :mrgreen:
     
  10. michelle

    michelle Well-Known Member

    I think they smell like . . . how do I put this nicely . . . not urine but another bodily fluid . . . that only men can produce . . . ewwww
     
  11. nsanemom22

    nsanemom22 Well-Known Member

    :shock:
     
  12. Vitameatavegemin

    Vitameatavegemin Well-Known Member

    My boys call them 'fish trees' because they think the trees smell like a fish market or the cleaning station where they fish with Grandpa...I didn't believe them until I took a big whiff...ugh! I may have to chop the nasty things down!! (Pretty don't carry a whole lot of weight, when you've gotta deal with that stench!)
     
  13. kookookacho

    kookookacho Well-Known Member


    ROFLMAO!! :lol::lol:

    ... dern, I can't stop laughing...
     
  14. le

    le Well-Known Member

    They are sure pretty to look at...in yards other than my own. We say they smell like an elephant house.
     
  15. ready2cmyKing

    ready2cmyKing Well-Known Member

    At least the bloom time is short! :-D
     
  16. nsanemom22

    nsanemom22 Well-Known Member

    This is when seasonal allergies come in handy! I can oooh and ahhh at the sight but can't smell squat for the clogged sinuses LOL
     
  17. KDsGrandma

    KDsGrandma Well-Known Member

    I've seen a series of landscape fads over the last several years, and all of them have turned out - shall we say - not so well. Who remembers red-tip photinias? Pretty, fast growing, easy to care for, but all genetically identical, so when a blight came along there was no escape. Bradford pears - fast growing, impressive in bloom, but a short bloom time and a short lived tree. 15-20 years after planting, most have started splitting and dying. Leyland Cypress - another attractive, fast growing tree, but shallow rooted, readily falling over in a storm.

    Consider native trees - redbud and dogwood, for example. They're much slower growing, but longer lived trees. I think there's a definite correlation between growth rate and the life of the tree.
     

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