Reading Leaves
Margin, arrangement, and venation separate a red maple from a Manitoba maple, and a paper birch from a trembling aspen.
Read the leaf note →Nevinorver is a small editorial notebook on identifying common trees by their leaves and bark, and on understanding how the urban canopy shapes the places people live across Canada.
You rarely need a lab to identify a tree. Leaf shape, bark texture, and the rhythm of the seasons carry most of the information. Each note below works through one of them with Canadian examples.
Margin, arrangement, and venation separate a red maple from a Manitoba maple, and a paper birch from a trembling aspen.
Read the leaf note →In winter the leaves are gone, but bark stays. Peeling white birch, ridged red oak, and shaggy hickory each tell a different story.
Read the bark note →Why cities count their trees, what a canopy target means, and how seasonal change reads differently along a street than in a forest.
Read the canopy note →Each article follows the same rhythm: look closely, compare against a short key, then confirm with a second feature. The goal is a habit you can carry into any park or boulevard.
Examples lean on species that are widespread in Canadian towns and cities, from the sugar maple of southern Ontario and Quebec to the paper birch of the boreal edge.
Spotted a tree you cannot place, or an error in one of these pages? Use the form and the editor will read it. This form runs entirely in your browser and does not transmit your details to a server.