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You think that stuff grows on trees?

Iseut discusses what might seem like a surprising amount of nuts and fruit now dropping from trees across Boston:

... Our native Black Walnut trees and Shagbark Hickory trees are well into dropping their fruit. They look like small green tennis balls; they turn dark as they mature and get easier to open -- a source of food for Native Americans, and said to be quite tasty, although that may vary from tree to tree. ...

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Would love for my street to

By cscott | Tue, 09/23/2008 - 9:03pm

Would love for my street to do that, South St in Rosi already has a few fruit trees but there is no common plan to it.

Cherry tree on our street

By adamg | Tue, 09/23/2008 - 9:42pm

Ornamental, not edible, but it's kind of a sad tree because the couple tried for years to get the city to plant it and they finally did and then the guy died. I think of him when I pass by (he was a nice guy).

This year's cherries

By Michael Kerpan | Tue, 09/23/2008 - 11:43pm

Our cherry trees (which produce miniature cherries) actually provided edible (if a tiny bit bitter) fruit this year.

shagbark nuts soaked in home

By lynn | Wed, 09/24/2008 - 6:26am

shagbark nuts soaked in home made maple syrup spooned over vanilla ice cream.

yum

Don't eat nuts from the Aesculus (horse-chestnuts /buckeye) tree

By jpbeat | Wed, 09/24/2008 - 8:20am

Easily confused with chestnuts (roasting on open-fires), the horse-chestnut contains a toxin that destroys red blood cells.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesculus

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