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B**I
Great reference book.
This is an outstanding reference for identifying trees east of the Rockies. I have two of them now, one for home and one at the cabin. If you’re interested in trees, it’s the book for you.
R**D
Compact
This compact book has more species of trees than most. It also has a lot of color pictures. It is good for identification purposes only and does not give information such as edible parts and other useful information.
J**S
Great Guides
The great tradition of guide books continues.
A**1
Great tree book
Photos and descriptions are great. For the eastern United States, this is a great book to identify trees.
G**R
Good pictures.
Somewhat hard to read the small print. A good reference to cross check with other reference books. Not a guide that I would carry to the field for quick identification purposes.
M**N
Getting to know your friends
Trees thrive all around us; but how much do we know about them? If you want to learn about your best friends and neighbors in a hurry, Elbert Little's field guide is a good way. I lived with a Black Walnut for 23 years before realizing my tall friend is the scarcest and most coveted of native hardwoods and was especially terrific for gunstocks. And I didn't know my two neighborly Common Persimmons were having a lovely relationship with one another (they must in order to produce the fruit), nor that their name was derived from the Algonquin.If you'd like to identify a stranger, Little's organization by thumb tabs based on leaf shape makes it easy to find the section where your tree is pictured with its leaves and bark in a full color photo. He also provides separate sections showing us flowers and fruit. You'll be charmed by an especially brilliant section showing red, orange, brown and gold autumn leaves.Who but a dendrologist, or tree identification specialist, would know so well how to share all this knowledge of trees? And Elbert Little is not just any dendrologist, mind you, but the former Chief Dendrologist of the U.S. Forest Service.What is a tree, really? According to Little, it's a "woody plant with an erect perennial trunk at least 3 inches in diameter at breast height, and definitely formed crown of foliage, and a height of at least 13 feet." That's good to know.If you love words (as I do), you're lucky to get a glossary with "lanceolate," "nutlet," "pith," "sepal," "stamen," and "whorled" fully explained. Besides a wealth of full color photos, the guide includes 400 pages of prose narratives and black and white diagrams describing the 315 native trees of the eastern two thirds of the continent arranged by family, as well as the common naturalized or introduced trees you'd be likely to run into in parks or cities.Here's a recommendation for you: walk in the woods for love of trees."If a man walks in the woods for love of them half of each day," Thoreau tells us, "he is in danger of being regarded as a loafer. But if he spends his days as a speculator, shearing off those woods and making the earth bald before her time, he is deemed an industrious and enterprising citizen."The danger of being regarded as a loafer is worth risking. Let this book be your companion. For all that's inside, it's amazingly small: 7.5" x 4" by 1" deep, with a soft laminated cover--perfect to fit in a jacket or backpack pocket.It's also great for lying on the ground and placing as a pillow under your head. To look up at the trees.
E**M
Best book on tree identification available!
You just can’t beat the National Audubon Society Field Guide to TREES!The actual photos of the leaves, bark, seeds, fruit, flowers, and diagram of tree are all you need to identify trees. As a retired elementary teacher of 42 years , I used the Audubon field guides to identify nature every year, and took them with me to use at home after retirement.
G**K
Great book
It helps you identify trees by leaves, bark and general design. Lots of pictures and illustrations to help along with good information on each.
**)
Missing part of the book (main cover sleeve) new update
MISSING THE FRONT SLEEVEAs an audobon collector I'm strongly disappointed for my book missing the main cover sleeve. It just looks awkward among my plant,rock,bird and other audoban books. And of course to just get a sleeve I have to return the entire book, something that's impossible for me to do while hospitalise so.... woooo. Everytime I look at my bookshelf I'll just be OCD annoyed.That aside I love the info and book in general. A perfect resource.Update: they GAVE ME A FULL REFUND for just missing the sleeve. I think I can let my OCD simmer when the whole book was covered because of this. Great customer service and a great reference to buy. Definitely will buy national Audubon books for years to come.
M**I
Not new condition
It’s a great book but I was dissatisfied with the condition upon arrivL. Some of the pages in the front were a little rripped. Not in new condition. And the cover was also ripped. Kind of unfortunate
A**R
Thin pages
Good and thorough guide, but the pages are incredibly thin and see through
J**Y
Great detailed tree guide
Great book. Noticed a mistake on pg. 313 Oriental Arborvitae is not part of the Thuja genus. Scientific name should be Platycladus orientalis and not Thuja orientalis.
D**N
Great Book
The content of this book is fantastic.
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