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Alnus glutinosa
Alnus glutinosa
Alnus glutinosa
Alnus glutinosa
Alnus glutinosa
Alnus glutinosa
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Dispatch by letter from €3.90.
Delivery charge from €5.90 Oversize package delivery charge from €6.90.
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This plant carries a 24 months recovery warranty
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We guarantee the quality of our plants for a full growing cycle, and will replace at our expense any plant that fails to recover under normal climatic and planting conditions.
Oversize package: home delivery by special carrier from €6.90 per order..
Express home delivery from €8.90.
Oversize package: home delivery by special carrier from €6.90 per order..
Express home delivery from €8.90.
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The common alder is a deciduous tree of medium size, emblematic of wetlands and watercourses. It is naturally widespread throughout Europe up to Scandinavia, up to an altitude of 1,200 m (3937 ft), except in the Mediterranean region. Easily regenerating from the stump, it often has several slender trunks with almost horizontal branches, giving it a strikingly pyramidal silhouette. Its charming leaves persist on the tree for a long time before falling in winter. Bright light green in colour, shiny, leathery, and rounded in shape, they are recognisable by their truncate tips. In winter, when most plants remain dormant, the alder illuminates the dark days like an inverted candelabra, with thin and pendulous male catkins that are yellowish when they bloom, measuring 8 cm (3.1 in) in length. The fruits from the previous year form dark-brown, almost black, cones, contrasting with the light shade of its flowers. The alder excels in wet and poor soils, sometimes being the only plant able to grow. It is to be used mainly for revegetation and preventing erosion along riverbanks.
In harsh climates and poor, marshy, and suffocating soils, the Common Alder, with its rot-resistant and lightweight wood, reigns supreme. This deciduous tree from the birch family is very common in the native flora of Europe. It is one of the few species capable of growing from northern France to the shores of the Mediterranean, always close to water. Its growth is rapid when young. At maturity, it reaches 25 m (82 ft) in height and 12 m (39 ft 5 in) in width. Its foliage is lighter on the underside, slightly sticky to the touch, especially on juvenile leaves. The buds are violet in colour and also sticky, particularly in winter. The fruit is a kind of small cone called a strobilus, 2 cm (0.8 in) long, containing tiny winged fruits that will be dispersed by the wind.
As a pioneering species, thriving in water from any source, the Common Alder is used in isolation, as a line tree, in groves, or to maintain banks along streams, natural pools, or in soggy, acidic soils with damp undergrowth. It should be kept away from foundations and buildings, as its root system, which can grow up to 4 m (13 ft 1 in) deep, is capable of clogging water pipes. For example, it can be combined with Nyssa sylvatica or Bald Cypress (Taxus distichum), which require almost the same growing conditions. Two species of ferns, such as Onoclea sensibilis, in neutral to acidic and moist soil, in full sun or partial shade, and Dryopteris palustris (Telypteris palustris), can also be planted at its base. An elegant small tree with the appearance of a giant fern, ideal for riverside or marsh scenes, in clear shade or in the sun.
The Common Alder is also a multipurpose tree, used in forests to prepare and improve the soil before planting poplars. Considered as a green manure by foresters, it purifies and enriches the soil in which it is planted, as its roots convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant proteins. Its wood, which turns blood-orange after cutting and is almost rot-resistant in water, was once used for underground water conduits and channels. A large part of the city of Venice is said to have been built on alder wood pilings. Since the 1980s, there has been a deadly disease that causes alders to wither, transmitted by the fungus Phytophthora alni, which enters through the roots, especially when they are planted near slow-moving, warm watercourses, on loamy-clayey substrates, with little shade, close to technical structures that slow down water flow. Cutting back all affected trees to ground level is recommended. To prevent this, monoculture plantings along watercourses should be avoided.
Alnus glutinosa in pictures
Plant habit
Flowering
Foliage
Safety measures
Botanical data
atteinterespiratoire
Cette plante peut entraîner des symptômes allergiques.
Evitez de la planter si vous ou vos proches souffrez de rhinite saisonnière ("rhume des foins").
Davantage d'informations sur https://plantes-risque.info
Easy to grow in consistently moist soil, the Glutinous Alder requires little maintenance. It should be planted in a moist, humus-bearing, preferably acidic (and even peaty and poor) soil, in the sun or partial shade. It tolerates wind well. Only prune to remove dead or unnecessary branches.
Planting period
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Hardiness is the lowest winter temperature a plant can endure without suffering serious damage or even dying. However, hardiness is affected by location (a sheltered area, such as a patio), protection (winter cover) and soil type (hardiness is improved by well-drained soil).
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The flowering period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, etc.)
It will vary according to where you live:
In temperate climates, pruning of spring-flowering shrubs (forsythia, spireas, etc.) should be done just after flowering.
Pruning of summer-flowering shrubs (Indian Lilac, Perovskia, etc.) can be done in winter or spring.
In cold regions as well as with frost-sensitive plants, avoid pruning too early when severe frosts may still occur.
The planting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, United Kingdom, Ireland, Netherlands).
It will vary according to where you live:
The harvesting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions in USDA zone 8 (France, England, Ireland, the Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...) fruit and vegetable harvests are likely to be delayed by 3-4 weeks.
In warmer areas (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), harvesting will probably take place earlier, depending on weather conditions.
The sowing periods indicated on our website apply to countries and regions within USDA Zone 8 (France, UK, Ireland, Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...), delay any outdoor sowing by 3-4 weeks, or sow under glass.
In warmer climes (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), bring outdoor sowing forward by a few weeks.