The Strange Fruit Of The Osage Orange

The patterns on the fruit of the Osage orange are the reason I photographed them.

Osage orange, (Maclura pomifera), also called bowwood, is a thorny tree or shrub native to the south-central United States. Its hard yellow-orange wood was used for bows and war clubs by the Osage and other Native American tribes (hence the name).

Female flowers are borne in a dense, nearly spherical cluster and fuse together to produce a fruit known as a multiple. The large yellow-green wrinkled fruit often grows to more than 13 cm (5 inches) in diameter and contains a milky sap that can produce dermatitis in humans.


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Comments

2 responses to “The Strange Fruit Of The Osage Orange”

  1. Joan E. Miller

    We call them monkey brains! Osage orange is an orphan tree, having lost its companion fauna that used to eat the fruits, thousands of years ago.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Good information. Thank you.

      Like

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