Gleditsia triacanthos.
Most nurseries will carry a thornless variety (Gleditdia triacanthos inermis) if you like the look of the canopy but don’t want the eye-gouging spikes.
Responsible_Ear_6005
My grandpa had one and they hurt you
Cornflake294
As others have said – honey locust. They developed those thorns hundreds of thousands of years ago as a defense against megafauna like mammoth, woolly rhino, giant sloth etc.
jennyb33
At first I thought someone was being artistic with the face and some hairy armpits 🤣
7 Comments
Honey Locust tree, they have spikes
Are we just ignoring the trees face?
Gleditsia triacanthos.
Most nurseries will carry a thornless variety (Gleditdia triacanthos inermis) if you like the look of the canopy but don’t want the eye-gouging spikes.
My grandpa had one and they hurt you
As others have said – honey locust. They developed those thorns hundreds of thousands of years ago as a defense against megafauna like mammoth, woolly rhino, giant sloth etc.
At first I thought someone was being artistic with the face and some hairy armpits 🤣
