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Does Red Mean Dead?

Started by Cedar Eater, July 31, 2003, 12:05:01 PM

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Cedar Eater

I have an abundance of these shrubs in the wetland of my Spruce woodlot (Alcona County, MI). The juicy red berries have a taste that I think would make a good jelly or wine. There's that old Boy Scout mantra about red fruit being potentially poisonous, but I've had two berries with no ill effects. The berries each had 5 little seeds which are very bitter. I've searched the national online plant database and struck out. Anybody know what these are?







Cedar Eater
Cedar Eater

Jeff

Looks like hackberry to me.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Cedar Eater

I did a google search on hackberry and found this:

http://www.cnr.vt.edu/dendro/dendrology/syllabus/coccidentalis.htm

Leaf: Alternate, simple, pinnately veined, 2 to 5 inches long. Leaves are ovate, with acuminate tips and a cordate, inequilateral base, three distinct veins meet at base. Leaf margins are serrate and may be somewhat pubescent below.

Flower: Very small (1/8 inch) and green, produced on stalks near the twig. Each flower with a 4 or 5 lobed calyx. Apparent in April to May.

Fruit: Fleshy, globose drupe, 1/4 to 3/8 inch in diameter, turning orange-red to dark purple when ripe. The flesh is thin and quite dry but edible and sweet, enclosing a large pit. Maturing in September and October.

Twig: Slender zigzag, light red-brown in color. The terminal bud is lacking, but a pseudoterminal bud is present. Lateral buds are small, tapering, and appressed, pith chambered at the nodes.

Bark: Gray or light brown in color, smooth with corky "warts" or ridges. Much later becoming scaly.

Form: A small to medium-sized tree.


These berries don't have a large pit and the leaves are not toothy like the ones shown in the photo at the website. Of course, hackberry could be a local name that doesn't match the meaning in some other locale. This is what's driving me nuts. Somebody called them currants, but the leaves are wrong from what I find on the www. I don't want to make fatal jelly.

Cedar Eater

Cedar Eater

Jeff

My brother-in-law grows current bushes in his yard. I never paid any attention to whatthey looked like other then they are red.

There are several hackberrys. There is one that is called sweetberry I think.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Texas Ranger

The Ranger, home of Texas Forestry

Jeff

I considered that too, but I think its out of our range aint it?
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Tom

It might be the "two-week fatal berry".  Call back in 14 days
...........if you can  :D

It doesn't look like any of the Yaupon we have down here. :P

Jeff

Isnt yaupon and evergreen?
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Tom

It is here.  But, then, so is most everything else. :D

jimbo

   i would say it is a sarvis    very eatable    trees can get 40 ft  and 12 to 16 in at the base     barries about 1/4 in in diameter  almost like hackbarry but the leaves a smother  several around this area

Tom

Here's a stab in the dark.
Kinnikinnick
follow the link to bearberry

Though you are in the range this is a canadian report.
click here

Indian Tobacco?  Try this one.

bitternut

Looks like tartarian honeysuckle to me.

Cedar Eater

I haven't ruled out tartarian honeysuckle yet (thanks for that) or it may be one of the other bush honeysuckles. I thought honeysuckles were all vines, but google shows some bush types in Wisconsin. This shrub is deciduous (this excludes yaupon and bearberry). I have serviceberry trees (aka juneberry or sarvis) on my property and they are single stem trees that I'm familiar with. This shrub grows in clumps with main stems about an inch thick with yellowish bark. It reminds me of multiflora rosa, but has no spines. I'll try to get up there with a camera to take pictures of the plants. I appreciate all the help.

Cedar Eater
Cedar Eater

Cedar Eater

I've done some more web crawling and found this:

http://www.invasive.org/weeds/usfsr8/BH.html

It's looking like I have at least one of these bush honeysuckles, probably the tartarian, because some of the berries are doubled. From everything I've read, they are too acidic for eating. They are not poisonous, but harmful in quantities. Maybe making jelly from them would help, but I'm not feeling experimental.

Thanks bitternut for the pointer and thanks everyone for the SWAGs.

Cedar Eater
Cedar Eater

bitternut

Well Cedar Eater I have never tried eating them in any form. I do know that the birds love them and also the chipmunks. They do a great job of seeding more clumps of honeysuckle. They do smell great in the spring.

If you get too close to the clumps when mowing now that they have fruit you end up with red spots on your butt. I know from experience. When you brush against the bush the berries drop off onto the seat of the tractor.

I will take a picture of one of my clumps the next time I get down to the farm and post it for comparison to yours.

Cedar Eater

I found recipes for both jam and jelly from tartarian honeysuckle at somebody's website. Apparently the cooking process handles the acidity. I'll have to get confirmation that the author is still alive before I'll try it. :D :D :D Now that I know they are iffy, I might just leave them to the wildlife. They taste good if you don't eat the seeds, but the seeds are so small it's a pain to separate them.

It seems that in some states they are considered invasive weeds and in other states they are planted for stabilizing erosion and songbird food. I have russian olive invasion at the same property, so my bushhog is my best friend.

Cedar Eater
Cedar Eater

Mark M

The fruit looks like what we call Pin Cherry. I can't remember the leaves but I do remember the jelly ;D

Cedar Eater

I think pin cherries have pits, like other cherries. These berries are really juicy and have multiple small seeds.

Cedar Eater

Den Socling

Cedar Eater,

They are what we call bush honeysuckle. We have a lot here in PA. Berries are red on some bushes and orange on others. I always heard that they were poisonous but I just ate one. Yep, three small seeds.

bitternut,

you are right. When my wife is driving her mobile stump grinder (I call it a lawn tractor), I refer to her as berrybutt this time of year.

den

Jeff

Den if you made the berries into jelly then you could call her sweet cheeks.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

bjorn

Looks like Autumn Olive to me.  They were planted along highways here in Virginia, and have now spread like wildfire into abandoned fields, etc.  I have not heard of people eating them, but the birds sure do like them.  

Cedar Eater

QuoteLooks like Autumn Olive to me.  They were planted along highways here in Virginia, and have now spread like wildfire into abandoned fields, etc.  I have not heard of people eating them, but the birds sure do like them.  

I have Autumn and Russian Olive on my property and these are definitely different. Did I mention the berries were juicy? Squeezing them is like squeezing a salmon egg. They burst like little water baloons. My olive bushes produce fruit that is much dryer. I'm pretty convinced now that it's some form of bush honeysuckle.

Thanks for everybody's help.

Cedar Eater
Cedar Eater

Jeff

CE do you have any cedar down right now? anything sorta dry? On the large side.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

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