Alder, Italian (Alnus cordata)
Italian Alder (Alnus cordata)
Italian Alder is a pretty,
fast growing egg shaped tree, often used as windbreak.
it is extremely shapely, and at a distance, bears more resemblance to a pear tree than
to the other members of the alder family. Italian Alder
leaves, which are carried late into the year (and which are
good in salads when young) are a shiny green and borne in much
greater numbers than on other Alders. Like all Alders, Alnus
cordata carries male and female catkins (both on the
same tree) in March, which are pollinated by the wind. The fruit,
which looks a bit like a small cone is carried in autumn and
is feasted on by seed-eating migrant birds. Italian
Alder bark is a brownish grey.
Alnus cordata is a nitrogen
fixer and is therefore beneficial in poor soils which it improves
over time - it is often used to reclaim land prior to planting
with other trees. The wood of the Italian Alder
is unremarkable except for the fact that it is to all intents
and purposes rot-proof when submerged. It is often used as piling
in bogs, rivers and lakes, and poles of Italian Alder
formed the foundations of Venice.
Any soil will do, although Alnus cordata
prefers heavier loams and wet clay. Italian Alder
is happy in both acid and alkaline ground and will tolerate
light shade. As if all that was not enough, Italian
Alder grows well by the sea and makes a superb large
hedge of 2 metres or so for which it should be planted at 2
per metre (50cm centres). If grown as hedging, Alnus
cordata is best clipped in late June or July.
In perfect conditions Italian Alder can reach
30 metres but it is more usually grows to 20-25m.
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