Gleditsia triacanthos
honey locust [Blooms: May-Jun]
More information
Honey locust is a native tree that grows 50-100 feet tall; it has a single trunk 2-3.5 feet in diameter. The bark on the trunk is gray-black, divided into plates with peeling edges; the bark of twigs and branches is smoother, brown, and hairless. New shoots are green and fuzzy. Leaves are alternate and invariably compound, either even-pinnate (i.e., the leaflets are all paired, with no terminal leaflet) all 6-14″ long with 5-11 pairs of leaflets, or bipinnate (i.e., the primary divisions of the compound leaf are themselves pinnate) with 4-7 pairs of even-pinnate leaflets 6-14″ long, each with 5-11 pairs of leaflets. Leaflets are 3/4-1.5″ long and about a third as wide. Thorns, both simple and branched, are usually present, especially on the trunk, but a thornless form exists; newly formed thorns can be a brilliant red. Flowers are present in 2-5″ long racemes, usually as either male or female, but perfect flowers may be present. The flowers are small (1/8-1/4″ across) and greenish-yellow. The fruit is a 6-14″ long, dark-brown seedpod.
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