<<RE-UPDATED AT BOTTOM – it’s Sideroxylon tenax!>>
I need some help. I found a shrub on the same hike I was taking when I found yesterday’s scary cactus.
I’m 99.9% sure this is an Eleagnus:
It has the same strange shape to the new growth, it has leaves that are a weird color underneath them (a rich brown, not silver like some of the other eleagnus varieties), it bears fruit with a single pit and it was growing in poor soil but still exhibited good green growth, meaning it’s probably fixing its own nitrogen.
Look at more pictures:
Notice how they’re rounder than the other Eleagnus fruits – and they don’t have the silver or gold “sparkles” on them.
Anyone have any idea what this could be? I ate a bunch of berries without getting sick, so I’m reasonably certain it’s not poisonous. (Kids – don’t try this at home!)
Whatever it is, it would make a great addition to a food forest.
UPDATE:
B.A. e-mailed me a tip that it might be Reynosia septentrionalis. The fruit is right, but the leaves and growth are not quite the same as the photos I’ve found.
In the comments, Misti suggests Ilex glabra. Close, but the fruit and leaves don’t quite match. No pucker on the end of these fruits.
UPDATE 10/6
B.A. e-mailed me two more suggestions.
“Hi David,
6 comments
I'm stumped.
Try Ilex glabra.
Yeah, I was 100% on the I. glabra but it was worth a trick. What natural area was it in? (Just found your blog while looking for permaculture. I lived in Florida for 8 years, mostly in south Florida, so I thought I'd give it a whirl.)
*wasn't* 100%
Black Chokeberry
This makes a nice landscape plant actually. Obviously the leaves are pretty and it provides good cover for wildlife as well as food. It is quite drought tolerant as well.
I'm in South Florida but have been looking for seed for this to grow a few specmens. If you saved any seed let me know. I also sent you an email with an offer of seeds I have which I think you will want.
Comments are closed.