No. The trunk is the oldest part . Counting the rings of the trunk is how you tell the trrees' age.
One way to estimate a tree's age is by counting its growth rings. Each ring represents one year of growth. Another method is to use tree coring, where a small section of the trunk is extracted and the rings are counted to determine the age.
No. A tree grows from the top.
The tree has a trunk shaped like a bottle - wide at the bottom and narrower at the top.
You need to stake it to help it stay upright until the trunk is strong enough.
For YOUR safety the conifer should be cut down in sections. Individual limbs to get access to the trunk then 'top' the tree, cut off the top section. Afterwards you can work your way down.
Certainly. The power and telephone companies do it all the time. It is not uncommon for a storm to 'top' a tree. Usually one of the top branches grows so that it replaces the center trunk and continues up.
They look like the top of a tree stump. I could describe it as a tree stump with all those rings that are used to count the age of a tree.
Banana tree is a herb. Although referred to as banana trees, they are not trees at all but a perennial herb. Its trunk is not a true one, but many leaves tightly wrapped around a single stem which emerges at the top as thefruit-bearing flower stalk.
Essentially, they climb up the trunk and find a branch. As they grow around the branch, the branch itself continues to grow outward, and the vine is pulled away from the trunk.
Every year a tree grows a new layer of wood. The new wood makes a ring around the old wood. If you count the rings, you know how old it is
A standard rose is a rose bush trained to a bare 'trunk' with a ball of foliage on the top like a topiary tree.