As winter draws to a close I always look forward to the first hazel catkins, that signal a change in the seasons ......... but then, when spring finally does arrive, I remember that I suffer from hay fever. The early-flowering trees are wind-pollinated, producing vast clouds of sneeze-inducing pollen.
Wind pollination is a chancy business and once the pollen is released it's rapidly diluted in the air, so the chances of an individual pollen grain landing on a female flower stigma, leading to the formation of a seed, decreases exponentially with the distance between then. So the only way to improve the odds is for trees to release great quantities of pollen
Male catkins of hazel.Tiny, female stigmas of hazel
Elm flowers. Before Dutch elm disease arrived, the bare crowns of mature elm trees were covered in a purple haze of flowers, a magnificent sight, now just a memory.
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