
Only a few counties within California lack native California black oak, Quercus kelloggii. Yet, it is not prominent where it is native locally. It generally inhabits mixed forests within the Coastal Ranges. It is rare among home gardens, and rarely available from nurseries. Within the Sierra Nevada, it is common enough to be harvestable as a hardwood timber.
With good exposure, mature California black oaks may get no taller than thirty feet. They can get twice as tall where they must compete with tall trees. The largest trees are higher than a hundred feet. Their elegantly upright trunks are generally less bulky than those of other oaks. Few are more than four feet wide. Gray bark darkens and roughens with age.
The deciduous foliage of California black oak is almost brownish drab green. It becomes brownish yellow prior to defoliation. Cooler weather enhances brighter yellow or orange color, but also accelerates defoliation. Foliage can linger into winter with milder weather. The handsomely lobed leaves are about four inches long, and bigger on vigorous stems. The docile roots are vulnerable to rot with frequent watering.
A lovely photo of the leaf. Our native oak is Quercus robur and some trees will lose their golden brown foliage around now while others will hang on to it all winter… a problem if we have heavy snow. It always surprises me to see two next to each other, one with and one without any leaves!
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Valley oak, which is a type of white oak, defoliates so slowly through winter, particularly if the weather is mild, that it sometimes still has old foliage as new foliage develops. It is annoying messy while it does so. No matter how many leaves I rake, it drops more until spring.
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