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Comments on Puzzle #19094: Oak leaf
By Marena Sasena (sachama)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: line & color logic only  

Puzzle Description Suppressed:Click below to view spoilers

#1: Steve LaFortune (lafor399) on Jun 24, 2012

Fun puzzle to solve
#2: BlackCat (BlackCat) on Jun 24, 2012
Great! Fun solve. Just the right size to have alot of detail without be boring.
#3: Minnie Fuerstnau (m.fuerstnau) on Jun 25, 2012
Really nice image for its size; thank you!
#4: Teresa K (fasstar) on Jun 25, 2012 [SPOILER]
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#5: Marena Sasena (sachama) on Jun 25, 2012 [SPOILER]
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#6: Kurt Kowalczyk (bahabro) on Jun 25, 2012
definitely in the white oak family, as can be seen by the rounded lobes. sorry, I have a degree in horticulture. trees and plants fascinate me. Love your puzzles!

side note, if you ever need help or a friendly piece of advice with the "grover business" as you termed it, you have a specialist on call.
#7: Marena Sasena (sachama) on Jun 25, 2012
Kurt, actually I have two problems. 1) Beeches's new leaves are small, yellow-red color, twisted and look like stopped in next growing 2)One from castaneas has falling flowers without full-blown.
#8: valerie o..travis (bigblue) on Jun 26, 2012
great, agree with all above :)
#9: Kurt Kowalczyk (bahabro) on Jun 29, 2012
lots of reasons for small yellowish twisted leaves. first, I'd have to ask the weather conditions that you've been having....you dry and hot? chlorosis might do it as well, which is basically a lack of iron. if you said an oak tree, I'd be more prone to say add a fertilizer containing iron(but you said beech)

flowers will abort early under stress. a stressed plant will produce a hormone called abscissic acid, causing the flowers to drop. flowers are for reproduction...a plant would rather survive than reproduce. once again, without seeing the plant, I can gather no idea as to why the plant is stressed to begin with. bad weather? doubtful if that's the problem if it's only one of several that is dropping flowers...lack of water? construction nearby? does it get more or less sun than the others? possibly stress from transplanting? your best bet here is to look at the surrounding environment, rather than the hurt plant itself
#10: Kurt Kowalczyk (bahabro) on Jun 30, 2012
and btw... beeches are usually found in the forests, particularly common to hills and mountainous areas. if in a nursery and they're not protected from the heat some, that might do it. are the leaves dropping? if it's dry, trees will drop some of their inside leaves to conserve water, and keep leaves towards the outside(because outside ones catch more sun to convert to energy).
#11: Marena Sasena (sachama) on Jul 4, 2012
Probably it was too much dry. Now is rainy more days and leaves look better. With castanea with falling flowers it finished positive only this tree has little chestnuts. Others trees with royal flowers have nothing :)
#12: jewel crown (Jewel) on Aug 13, 2016
Beautiful. Lots of fun to solve.

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