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Hazel flowers


The hazel has both male and female flowers on each shrub, and the two flowers are quite different. The male flowers are gathered within the long, breeze-blown catkins and these are by far the most prominent. Each catkin is made up of many individual flowers – these are the small green/yellow male flowers which produce the pollen.
The hazel is wind pollinated and the pollen from the catkins blows to reach the female flowers which you would never spot unless you looked carefully – they are tiny individual flowers, visible only as red styles protruding from a green bud-like structure on the same branches as the male flowers. Once pollinated in the springtime, the female flowers set to work producing the hazelnuts which ripen in the autumn.
The hazel is wind pollinated and the pollen from the catkins blows to reach the female flowers which you would never spot unless you looked carefully – they are tiny individual flowers, visible only as red styles protruding from a green bud-like structure on the same branches as the male flowers. Once pollinated in the springtime, the female flowers set to work producing the hazelnuts which ripen in the autumn.
Gudrun, Fotofan, Erhard Bernstein, Nouchetdu38 and 17 other people have particularly liked this photo
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I have a twisted hazel in my garden which has just started producing catkins which are shorter and stubbier than these, but I've never noticed the female bits before........I'll have to go and have a look!
Amelia club has replied to Keith Burton clubAmelia club has replied to Keith Burton clubwww.gardeningexpress.co.uk/corylus-avellana-contorta-medusa-special-corkscrew-hazel?gclid=EAIaIQobChMImZa8mKvw_AIVi_ftCh2lPgh0EAAYBiAAEgLEdPD_BwE
Keith Burton club has replied to Amelia clubAmelia club has replied to Keith Burton clubKeith Burton club has replied to Amelia clubSign-in to write a comment.