Winter twig
Male & female flowers
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The
leaves are alternate,
3-5 lobed,
almost hairless and 12-25 cm long. Each lobe is coarsely
toothed and strongly veined.
The leaf-stalks are 3-10 cm long.
ID
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London
Plane is a large, deciduous
tree with a rounded outline up to 35 m high and an
unmistakeable smooth bark, which peels off in large
flakes leaving creamy patches. It is planted for its
summer shade and found mainly in town parks and gardens.
The
male and female flowers are in separate clusters on the
same trees (monoecious).
Red
female flowers grow in 2 or 3 many-flowered clusters at
the tip of shoots, while male flowers are yellow, in
smaller clusters, back down the shoot.
The
spherical fruits, about 2.5 cm across, remain on the
tree through the winter.
Facts
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London
Plane arose as a hybrid
between American Plane and Oriental Plane, being first
described in 1670, from a specimen in Oxford Botanic
Garden.
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The
wood is hard and fine-grained and is sold under the
name of 'Lacewood', reflecting the delicate pattern of
the grain.
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Shiny
leaves, easily washed clean by rain, prevent this
Plane from being stifled by city soot, hence the urban
planting
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