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russian olive status ? Options
 
gazal
#61 Posted : 6/15/2011 2:55:53 PM

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Dreammethodtool wrote:


Oh, and leather gloves are highly recommended for harvesting leaves!

Why ? Could them hurt, damage, cut the skin ?
 

Good quality Syrian rue (Peganum harmala) for an incredible price!
 
Felnik
#62 Posted : 6/15/2011 3:53:43 PM

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The branches are kinda of spikey not thorns really just short spikey branches on the branches if that makes any sense
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
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http://vimeo.com/32001208
 
gazal
#63 Posted : 6/15/2011 4:37:43 PM

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WOW ! tnx !
 
Dreammethodtool
#64 Posted : 6/15/2011 5:22:27 PM

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I also thought that this PDF may be helpful in identifying the differences between Russian Olive and Autumn Olive, which is a close relative that also has thorns.
One main distinction is Russian olives more elongated leaves.

http://na.fs.fed.us/spfo...mn-and-russian-olive.pdf
 
Dorge
#65 Posted : 6/15/2011 5:25:42 PM

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Thorns have been know to cause infections... Lots of hunters complain about these trees...

As far as the ethanol leaf extract goes, you basically made the same thing as 10x caapi leaf which can be a little sticky some times. If it's kept in the freezer it maintains solid form and can be broken off when needed. Another way to get around the stickyness is to add more smoking materials to it. I find the American spirit powwow blend to be vey nice.
I think the important part of the ethanol extraction is any one can do it regardless of their level of knowledge in kitchen chemistry. though I'm not going to argue that it would be nice and tidy and easy to smoke with a proper extraction using other means.
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MelCat
#66 Posted : 6/15/2011 5:36:33 PM

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Dreammethodtool wrote:
I also thought that this PDF may be helpful in identifying the differences between Russian Olive and Autumn Olive, which is a close relative that also has thorns.
One main distinction is Russian olives more elongated leaves.

http://na.fs.fed.us/spfo...mn-and-russian-olive.pdf


Do the Autumn Olive Trees contain harmalas too?
Convert a melodic element into a rhythmic element...
 
Felnik
#67 Posted : 6/15/2011 5:49:11 PM

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Hold on a sec the Russian olive I,m using has no thorns . That picture
Is something different
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
Arthur C. Clarke


http://vimeo.com/32001208
 
Dreammethodtool
#68 Posted : 6/15/2011 5:55:04 PM

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On the first and second page of this thread Snozzleberry stated that they do not show evidence of them being present(UV reaction)
 
Dreammethodtool
#69 Posted : 6/15/2011 6:23:25 PM

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Hangs head in shame. It appears I have confused it with Silver/thorny buffalo berry. I am stepping down from helping on this one until I locate a plant. I know I have seen them, and they grow around here....
A difference being that the leaves from the Russian olive appear to grow one by one from the branch, whereas the buffalo berry has leaves that grow in clusters off the branch.

FYI: There are several look a likes for this tree!
 
Dorge
#70 Posted : 6/15/2011 6:52:19 PM

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Hahahah! This is awesome. Heheh.... They dont have thorns so to speak but thorn like stem spurs.


Autumn Olive
Elaeagnus umbellata Thunb.

International Code - ELUM
FIA survey code - 2038

Miller, James H. 2003. Nonnative invasive plants of southern forests: a field guide for identification and control. Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS–62. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 93 p.



Plant. Tardily deciduous bushy leafy shrub, 3 to 20 feet (1 to 6 m) in height, with scattered thorny branches. Leaves silvery scaly beneath, with many red berries in fall.

Stem. Twigs slender and silver scaly, spur twigs common, with some lateral twigs becoming pointed like thorns. Branches and main stems glossy olive drab with scattered thorns and many whitish dots (lenticels), becoming light gray to gray brown with age and eventually fissuring to expose light-brown inner bark.

Leaves. Alternate, elliptic 2 to 3 inches (5 to 8 cm) long and 0.8 to 1.2 inches (2 to 3 cm) wide. Margins entire and wavy. Bright green to gray green above with silver scaly midvein and densely silver scaly beneath. Petioles short and silvery.

Flowers. February to June. Axillary clusters, each with 5 to 10 tubular flowers with 4 lobes. Silvery white to yellow. Fragrant.

Fruit and seeds. August to November. Round, juicy drupe 0.3 to 0.4 inch (7 to 10 mm) containing one nutlet. Red and finely doted with silvery to silvery-brown scales.

Ecology. Prefers drier sites. Shade tolerant. Spreads by animal-dispersed seeds and found as scattered plants in forest openings and open forests, eventually forming dense stands. A nonleguminous nitrogen fixer.

Resembles silverthorn or thorny olive, E. pungens Thunb., and Russian olive, E. angustifolia L. Silverthorn is an evergreen that has brown scaly and hairy twigs, flowers in late fall, and few reddish-silver scaly drupes in spring. Russian olive has silver scaly twigs and leaves, flowers in early summer, and many yellow olives in fall and winter. Also resembles minniebush, Menziesia pilosa (Michx. ex Lam.) Juss. ex Pers., a Southern Appalachian native at high elevations, which is distinguished by glands, not scales, on the midvein and leaves with finely serrate margins.

History and use. Introduced from China and Japan in 1830. Widely planted for wildlife habitat, strip mine

http://www.invasive.org/eastern/srs/AO.html
Dorge is cooperatively owned and cooperatively run by various hyperspacial entities working as a collabertive sentience project for the betterment of sentient exploration.

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Dreammethodtool
#71 Posted : 6/15/2011 7:16:43 PM

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Ok, I may have a positive match this time. I had actually taken the leaves and bark from trees in 2 different areas. The one I took the bark from appears to indeed be Russian Olive. At least from my untrained eye(sigh). This look a little closer to what you have Felnik?
Dreammethodtool attached the following image(s):
P6150092.JPG (141kb) downloaded 345 time(s).
 
Dorge
#72 Posted : 6/15/2011 8:12:27 PM

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That looks right.
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Felnik
#73 Posted : 6/15/2011 8:59:16 PM

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here are some picts of what I'm working with

distant shot is a classic form of this tree, most of the time its buried in with others you don't get to see its full shape.

closeup of trunk is significant, the group of trunks going in all directions is very distinctive of this tree .
it seems as the tree ages the thicker lower branches eventually die and naturally fall off.
The area around an older one is usually strewn with dead branches .
Felnik attached the following image(s):
R.O.#1 6:11.jpg (94kb) downloaded 317 time(s).
IMAG0283.jpg (104kb) downloaded 312 time(s).
IMAG0281.jpg (65kb) downloaded 313 time(s).
IMAG0282.jpg (116kb) downloaded 314 time(s).
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
Arthur C. Clarke


http://vimeo.com/32001208
 
SnozzleBerry
#74 Posted : 6/15/2011 9:37:23 PM

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Dreammethodtool wrote:
Ok, I may have a positive match this time. I had actually taken the leaves and bark from trees in 2 different areas. The one I took the bark from appears to indeed be Russian Olive. At least from my untrained eye(sigh). This look a little closer to what you have Felnik?

I'd second Dorge and say that looks good to me...we have tons of Umbellata around here and that looks different from it in all the proper ways. I'm also starting to think that my old spot may have been the only population of Russian olive around me; everything else I've come across is clearly Autumn olive and I fall slightly outside of the reported range for the species. Damn developers Crying or very sad
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Dorge
#75 Posted : 6/15/2011 10:20:58 PM

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You can see in felniks pics the slight stem "thorn" stubs.
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Dreammethodtool
#76 Posted : 6/15/2011 10:23:28 PM

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Felnik, what you are using looks different from the other sources around identifying Russian Olive, especially the bark near the base of the tree. Yours appears smooth, while other photos show it as quite rough, and it can be peeled off.
And unless it is just the picture, the leaves look very green compared to other photos.

Like this:
http://www.anpc.ab.ca/wi...ifolia&printable=yes

Not saying you are wrong though....

Thanks for the feedback on ID everyone. Bark and leaves back in pots on the stove and I'm back baby!
 
Felnik
#77 Posted : 6/15/2011 11:23:43 PM

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The type of tree I,m dealing with has smooth bark and white blooms not yellow .
There is rough bark on an older growth tree nesrby but only the main
Trunk . Otherwise collected bark has been smooth not rough.
Interesting
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
Arthur C. Clarke


http://vimeo.com/32001208
 
Dorge
#78 Posted : 6/15/2011 11:28:06 PM

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We really need a positive ID ON THIS BECAUSE IT SOUNDS ACTIVE AS HELL!
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Felnik
#79 Posted : 6/15/2011 11:33:32 PM

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I may be wrong about the flowers because everything else lines up
. It's starting to form the tiny beginnings of berries or technically
Fruits at the moment . Flowering was approx 3-4 weeks ago
The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
Arthur C. Clarke


http://vimeo.com/32001208
 
AlbertKLloyd
#80 Posted : 6/16/2011 12:18:40 AM

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The plants in the Felnik photos look to be the same genus but not the same species as russian olive, the plants look kind of like E umbellata

The bark of russian olive takes on different textures with regard to different ages
old trees have peeling layers of brownish red fibrous bark, this material does contain alkaloids making older trees ideal for playing with this species, the alkaloids are stable and old bark contains them
The leaves contain far less alkaloid, extractions of leaves have very little glow under UV, while bark extractions glow a bright green color. The bark contains very large amounts of tannins.

sometimes russian olive puts out sap into a globular forms much like amber, this seems to be stimulated by some pests or insects and the sap balls are highly UV reactive. The fruits do not seem to be active, I have eaten them several times and chewed leaves. Caapi leaf is active when chewed fresh like a salvia quid method, however the Russian olive is not.


If one finds an old tree harvesting 10kg of old bark is very easy and does not harm the tree.

Felnik, would you consider gathering ripe fruit in late summer and mailing it out to several people to grow? The plant should require cold stratification, dried ripe fruits should have viable seed.
 
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