Beaked - Hazelnut
It produces pink female flowers (tiny, red-styled) and long, dangled yellow male catkins in late winter. In autumn, its leaves turn a brilliant yellow.
While rarely cultivated, its resilience, high protein, and adaptability make it a valued native plant for naturalizing, wildlife habitat creation, and even land conservation projects. it to the American hazelnut (Corylus americana)? Specific recipes or traditional uses? Let me know! BEAKED HAZELNUT - USDA Plants Database beaked hazelnut
It thrives in moist, well-drained soils, particularly in forest edges, clearings, and wooded hillsides, thriving from British Columbia to California and across the northeast to Georgia. It produces pink female flowers (tiny, red-styled) and