Found this in my Mom's old unused garden this year when it was just sticks. I was clearing the soil in winter so I put it in this pot until I knew what it was- still no idea! Now that it has some leaves, I tried google lensing it but getting different answers. One being that it was an invasive honeysuckle I need to kill on sight, other times said its witch hazel or blueberry, another saying its Japanese magnolia.

Any idea? In NJ near the Pine Barrens btw

by ImKindaDumb_PlsHelp

10 Comments

  1. TheIlustriousUrchin

    All the google suggestions are wayyy off. That looks like a sassafras. If so, absolutely plant it somewhere, they‘re native to your area, have really neat leaves, and beautiful fall color.

  2. RainbowDarter

    Sassafras is interesting. I had some 30 foot trees in my yard that were in really rough shape so I cut them down

    It spouts from the roots for 5 years or so.

    20 years after I cut it down, the stumps are finally starting to break down

    The leaves turn bright red in the fall.

  3. Independent_Home_244

    Sassafras. Beautiful tree. Keep it. Gorgeous in fall

  4. Alternatively, you can boil the roots to make a “spring tonic” that is a step away from being mdma. Planting it would be nicer to the sassafras tree though.

    Going sassafras hunting myself soon.

  5. KeyInvestment6594

    People are saying sassafras are you sure it’s not a fig lol?

  6. Hunter_Wild

    Sassafras I’m pretty sure. There’s no native figs in the North East and they do not frequently escape cultivation here either.

  7. SharpPhilosopher3734

    Sassafras. That’s the root in root beer. I used to shave the roots and simmer it for tea when I was a kid. We had a wood stove insert in our fireplace that had a cooking surface on the top so I made the entire house smell fantastic.

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