Logo Logo

    • Home
    • About APAC
      • Volunteer
      • Membership
    • Events
      • Events Timeline
    • Park Trails
      • Trail Preservation Project
      • More Trail Info
      • Tree Trail Species
      • Kids Trail Tree Species
    • Gardens
      • Garden News
    • About Ault Park
      • FAQs
      • Weeping Cherry Trees
      • 1913 Ault Park Map
      • Park Features
    • Contact
    • Donate

    Kids Trail Tree Species

    Black Locust Its thick bark covers a yellow wood that is used to make fence posts. This wood is very heavy and hard and does not rot when placed into the ground. Black Cherry Bark is very scaly and very dark. It has a chemical the Indians used to stop their coughs, which is still used today. Furniture is also made from the tree's reddish wood. Bur Oak Bark is divided into long strips. The tree's wood is strong and hard and is used for lumber. Squirrels and Blue Jays feed on the Bur Oak's acorns. Black Maple The bark is broken into ridges and the wood is very strong. Leaves are usually 3-lobed while the Sugar Maple is 5-lobed. American Beech Has smooth, gray bark that stretches as the tree grows. The wood is very strong and hard and is used for floorboards. Yellow Buckeye The bark is broken into flat scales. Its large brown seeds look like the eyes of a deer. The related Ohio Buckeye is the Ohio state tree. Hackberry Its bark is covered with corky growths. Its wood is soft and weak and used mainly for firewood. White Basswood Bark is flat and was used by the Indians to cover their huts. The wood has no smell and is used to make food boxes. Bees make honey from the tree's flowers. Sugar Maple Bark is smooth on young trees and broken into ridges on older trees. Indians discovered how to make syrup from the tree's sap. The wood is used to make furniture and flooring.

    Photos by Rudy Siegel

    About Ault Park Advisory Council (APAC)

    Logo

    APAC is an independent non-profit organization run by a group of neighborhood volunteers who are interested in preserving and improving Ault Park and encouraging its use by the public.

    Quick Links

    • Contact
    • Events Timeline
    • Membership Donation
    • Volunteer
    • Ault Park Trail Map

    © 2025 Ault Park Advisory Council. All Rights Reserved
    Website designed by Jill Annenberg with Cre8MediaHub