Landscaping with Trees in the Midwest. Scott A. Zanon

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Landscaping with Trees in the Midwest - Scott A. Zanon

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      LANDSCAPING with TREES in the MIDWEST

      LANDSCAPING with TREES in the MIDWEST

      A Guide for Residential & Commercial Properties

      Scott A. Zanon

      OHIO UNIVERSITY PRESS

       Athens

      Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio 45701

       ohioswallow.com

      © 2014 by Ohio University Press

      All rights reserved

      To obtain permission to quote, reprint, or otherwise reproduce or distribute material from Ohio University Press publications, please contact our rights and permissions department at (740) 593-1154 or (740) 593-4536 (fax).

      Printed in the United States of America

      Ohio University Press books are printed on acid-free paper

      24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 5 4 3 2 1

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Zanon, Scott A.

      Landscaping with trees in the Midwest : a guide for residential and commercial properties / Scott A. Zanon.

      pages cm

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-0-8040-1151-8 (pb : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8040-4058-7 (pdf) 1. Ornamental trees—Middle West. 2. Landscape design—Middle West. I. Title.

      SB435.52.M5Z37 2014

      635.9’7710977—dc23

      2014007918

      Contents

       Foreword to the First Edition

       Preface to the Expanded Edition

       Preface to the First Edition

       Acknowledgments

       Trees versus Turf

       Why Plant Trees?

       Selecting Trees

       Selective Pruning and Shade Seeding

       Tree Cultural Practices

       List of 65 Desirable Trees

       Tree Growth Rates & Sizes Table

       United States Hardiness Zone Maps

       Individual List by Scientific Name with Color Photographs

       Emerald Ash Borer: EAB

       Plant Usage Guide: Scientific Name

       Plant Usage Guide: Common Name

       Bibliography

       Index

       to the First Edition

      TREES ARE A beautiful and natural part of North American golf courses and landscapes, but in most cases they have either been taken for granted or neglected. The problem isn’t that we as golfers don’t put a high value on trees, for we often overvalue them. Rather, the problem is that we have not had good informational sources, specific to golf courses, to refer to and rely on for selecting and caring for golf course trees. Until now, that is.

      Scott Zanon, author of this book, realized the lack of information on golf course trees when he served as chair of the Scarlet Golf Course Restoration Committee and as chair of the Green Committee for The Ohio State University golf courses—six holes on 300+ acres with lots of trees and tree issues. As is typical of most golf courses, there were few trees on the OSU property when the courses were built in the 1930s. Then, after World War II, seemingly everyone involved with the golf courses—including course superintendents, staff, coaches, green committees, golfers, and university officials—felt compelled to instigate planting more trees. By the 1990s, as many of the trees reached maturity, it became clear that they were either the wrong trees, were in the wrong place, or both, and, thereby, were adversely affecting the golf course and golfing experience. But a tree, once it reaches a certain size or stature, becomes somewhat sacred to a number of people who subsequently resist its removal, no matter what the negative consequences it causes or potential liability it poses. Scott, who has a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture from OSU with majors in both agronomy (turfgrass science) and horticulture (landscape horticulture) took a more objective and balanced view of trees. However, when he proposed scientific reasons for tree renovations or removal, without golf-course-specific information sources he could use to convince folks what was the right thing to do, Scott faced stiff opposition. So he decided to write a user-friendly text to help others involved with trees in the home landscape and on larger properties such as golf courses.

      The result is a book that doesn’t just look good on the bookshelf. This book should become a well-used source of information to improve the health and beneficial qualities of trees.

      In school we are taught that a “weed” is any plant out of its proper place: that includes trees. I have seen and experienced many instances where huge trees were simply “weeds” on the golf course. Perhaps the most dramatic example was a monstrous silver maple, with a girth of perhaps 80 to 90 inches, growing on the fourth tee at Scioto Country Club. The tree was not only degrading the turf on the tee through the normal negative influences of the shade that it produced, but its many surface roots were forcing the green’s staff to hand water the tee more frequently in order to keep it uniformly green. Furthermore, the tree, as well as greatly complicating the daily maintenance

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