November 21, 2024

VIDEO: Possibly The Most Unique Tree Ever? Levi Explains | S1:E7 | MIgardener


.If you have ever wondered what the kinko biloba tree actually is, why the leaves are so weird, and where did it come from? Levi is breaking this tree down piece by piece to explain why this tree is probably the weirdest tree you will ever see.

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28 thoughts on “VIDEO: Possibly The Most Unique Tree Ever? Levi Explains | S1:E7 | MIgardener

  1. LEVI YOU ROCK!!!!! Show more pics of the exotic tree please. I've never seen one. LIVE here from the Texas Gulf Coast—- Harvey Tracker. —-Ike surveyor—-Katrina Took my barn…yatta yatta …ECT. ect. ect. Robin

  2. Back in the late 90s there was a huge fad about taking Ginko to make you smarter, improve your memory etc. People were planting them all over the place, there were people putting sawdust, yard clippings all sorts of nasty stuff in capsules and selling them as Ginko…it was crazy!

  3. I knew they were the oldest trees, but I didn't know they were that old! Thanks for the info. BTW, I was just in a hospital cafeteria that had fake Ginko trees and I pointed them out to my daughter. She was not impressed.

  4. Yeah they stink lol. I have a couple (m and f) and the fruit falls from treeand when it gets rotteb is when itstinks. I guess it worked to atract animals to eat the rotten fruit and later defecate the seed away from the tree

  5. Love you Levi!! I was cracking up, but seriously I've heard of it and its properties for health, but all the the other facts you mentioned were new to me. Always great to learn something new, thank you much appreciated! 😉

  6. Just want to clear up/add some stuff
    1. Ginkgo is a gymnosperm, so by definition it cannot be classified by monocot or dicot. Those words only apply to angiosperms. Their means of fertilization are the same as conifers and cycads because they are gymnosperms.
    2. Ginkgo leaves are used to make a tea believed to have medicinal properties, while the seed inside the fruit is cracked open and used in cooking. It has a very unique but slightly bitter taste. I highly recommend trying it, although it may have negative health effects if eaten in large quantities.

  7. My university has a story about ordering a few gingko trees. They ordered male ones and planted them, and soon thereafter found out that they were most certainly sent females because of the awful stench. They've just left them over the years, and there were a few times I was walking across campus and smelled this awful smell, and sure enough I'd look around and there'd be a gingko.

  8. I had contemplated planting one in my garden. The very next day after viewing your video I was passing my local garden centre and popped in for a browse to see what was on offer. Guess what? There was a Ginko Biloba for sale. It's now waiting to be planted in my garden. As I have never seen it on sale in my garden centre I thought this is just too much of a coincidence. So thanks for inspiring my purchse in S.E London. BTW the Kinko Biloboa you mention in the short description above – is this a hybrid for fetish gardeners? Keep up the good videos. Thanks.

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