(urth) The spiny orange - we used to throw the fruit at each other as kids and call them stink bombs.

brunians at brunians.org brunians at brunians.org
Tue Nov 3 11:47:45 PST 2009


Pardon, I meant seperate male and female plants, not seperate flowers on
the same stem.


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> These plants with seperate male and female flowers are mostly ancient
> cultivers.
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>> The spiny orange of Able's bow.    Wolfe has a hand carved walking stick
>> of osage orange - carved by Joe Mayhew.
>> Maclura pomifera
>>>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
>> Osage-orange, Horse-apple or Bois D'Arc even know as the Drewedic
>> Bullochus (Maclura pomifera) is dioeceous </wiki/Plant_sexuality>  plant
>> species, with male and female flowers </wiki/Flower>  on different
>> plants. It is a small deciduous </wiki/Deciduous>  tree </wiki/Tree>  or
>> large shrub </wiki/Shrub> , typically growing to 8-15 metres (26-49 ft)
>> tall. The fruit </wiki/Fruit> , a multiple fruit </wiki/Multiple_fruit>
>> , is roughly spherical, but bumpy, and 7-15 cm in diameter, and it is
>> filled with a sticky white latex </wiki/Latex>  sap </wiki/Sap> . In
>> fall, its color turns a bright yellow-green and it has a faint odor
>> similar to that of oranges </wiki/Orange_(fruit)> .[1] <>
>> The Osage-orange is commonly used as a tree row windbreak
>> </wiki/Windbreak>  in prairie states, which gives it one of its
>> colloquial names, "hedge apple".
>> The trees acquired the name bois d'arc, or "bow-wood", from early French
>> </wiki/France>  settlers who observed the wood being used for war clubs
>> and bow-making by Native Americans
>> </wiki/Native_Americans_in_the_United_States> .[3] <>  Meriwether Lewis
>> was told that the people of the Osage Nation </wiki/Osage_Nation>
>> "esteem the wood of this tree for the making of their bows, that they
>> travel many hundred miles in quest of it." Many modern bowyers assert
>> the wood of the Osage Orange is superior even to English Yew for this
>> purpose, though this opinion is by no means unanimous. The trees are
>> also known as "bordarch" trees, most likely originating from a
>> corruption of "bois d'arc."
>>
>>
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