
Ostrya
Ostrya is a Montréal-based brand of mountaineering clothing and equipment. Our mission is to create functional garments reflecting a progressive aesthetic.
Ostrya - Wikipedia
Ostrya is a genus of eight to 10 small deciduous trees belonging to the birch family Betulaceae. Common names include hop-hornbeam and hophornbeam. It may also be called ironwood, a …
Ostrya virginiana - Wikipedia
Ostrya virginiana (American hophornbeam) is a small deciduous understory tree growing to 18 m (59 ft) tall and 20–50 centimetres (8–20 in) trunk diameter.
Ostrya virginiana - North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant …
Eastern hop-hornbeam, is a slender deciduous tree in the Betulaceae (birch) family. The common name is derived from the hardness of its wood and the hop-like fruit.
Ostrya virginiana - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Ostrya virginiana, commonly called American hop hornbeam, is a deciduous, Missouri native tree which usually occurs in dry soils on rocky slopes, upland woods and bluffs throughout the …
Ostrya - Trees and Shrubs Online
Ostrya could be considered a text-book example of a genus whose distribution has been drastically fragmented by Ice Age climate change: there is one species which has spread …
Wildlife: The hop-like papery sack encases a nutlet that is the fruit of this tree and is a winter food for ring-necked pheasants, rabbits, grouse, turkeys, deer, squirrels, an several songbirds. …
Ostrya carpinifolia - Wikipedia
Ostrya carpinifolia, the European hop-hornbeam, is a tree in the family Betulaceae. It is the only species of the genus Ostrya that is native to Europe. The specific epithet carpinifolia means …
Hop-hornbeam | Description, Tree, Bark, Uses, & Facts
hop-hornbeam, (genus Ostrya), genus of about seven species of deciduous ornamental trees of the birch family native to Eurasia and North America. They are closely related to hornbeams of …
Ostrya virginiana (Mill - US Forest Service Research and …
Eastern hophornbeam (Ostrya virginiana), also called American hophornbeam, hornbeam, leverwood, and "ironwood," is a small, short-lived tree scattered in the understory of hardwood …