I’ve always liked these. The seedpod from the sweetgum tree, Liquidambar styraciflua. They are persistent; this one, one of a whole host, only recently (probably in our recent heavy snow) brought to earth. Each cavity contains many tiny seeds, which provide food for songbirds, chipmunks, squirrels, and couple things we don’t see much of in Brooklyn: wild turkey and bobwhite. Surely the Death Star would have been more impressive if it been shaped like this and not a perfect sphere?
The sweetgum is so named, commonly and binomially, because of its tasty sap. Hardened clumps of it have been chewed as gum. Has anybody out there ever tried it? It’s a Southern species, and this, Brooklyn, is about it’s northern-most range. This photo was taken on the southern end of Prospect Park Lake on Friday.
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