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