Aesculus hippocastanum.
A horse chestnut tree!
Latin hippocastanum refers to the horse chestnut tree, scientifically known as Aesculus hippocastanum. This tree is native to southeastern Europe and is known for its palmate leaves and distinctive spiky fruit capsules that contain shiny brown nuts. It is commonly planted as an ornamental tree in parks and gardens.
Sweet Chestnut Answer. The Horse Chestnut (Aesculus Hippocastanum is the tree that supplies conkers. The Sweet Chestnut (Castanea sativa) sometimes called the Spanish Chestnut supplies the nuts we roast and eat around Christmas.
The 'conker tree' is also known as the 'horse chestnut tree'.
Sounds like a Horse Chestnut.
A banana is not a tree but a herb. The banana leaves are bigger than the horse chestnut leaves.
horse chestnut trees
Horse chestnut, or chestnut horse translated to Hindi is ban khaur, or hars chesTanaT. It is the nutlike seed of a tree.
Conkers come from the horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum), which is a deciduous tree known for its large, distinctive leaves and spiky green fruits.
No, horse chestnut trees are native to Europe and are not found growing naturally in Australia.
yes its the nut of a horse chestnut tree.
Yes