Botany

budding vs blooming

  1. s88f
  2. Violet Snow

This archived discussion is "read only" due to the absence of an active Feature Writer/moderator for this topic.



Top
1.   May 2, 2007 7:23 AM

» s88f - What's the difference?


My wife & I are watching the new leaves exploding on the red maples and were wondering: Is there a difference between budding & blooming for trees?

-- posted by s88f

Permalink Print Discussion Print Discussion Email Discussion Email Discussion Suite101: budding vs blooming How to subscribe to feeds

Top
2.   May 24, 2007 12:55 PM

» Violet Snow - What's the difference?

In response to What's the difference? posted by s88f:


Forgive me for taking so long to reply; I don't get a lot of discussion posts, so I forget to check them. I'm so glad to hear from you.

Budding refers to the swelling of buds in preparation for leafing or blooming (which is the same as flowering, referring only to flowers). I'd define "leafing" as the process from the point when individual, recognizable leaves appear until the leaves are at their mature size. Blooming or flowering means at least some of the flowers have emerged from the buds and have opened.

For trees, depending on the species, leaves and flowers may emerge at different times and in different sequence. By the time you can really see them, budding is over. Budding is fascinating--it proceeds very fast, and the buds look different every day, but you have to look closely and begin early if you're going to catch the different stages.

Violet

Suite101
Violet Snow
Contributing Writer for Suite101

Permalink Print Discussion Print Discussion Email Discussion Email Discussion Suite101: budding vs blooming How to subscribe to feeds

This archived discussion is "read only" due to the absence of an active Feature Writer/moderator for this topic.

Please follow the guidelines set forth in the Suite101 Posting Etiquette when adding to the discussion.