Photo Gallery
Sign at Entrance 2 (west side) of the Baker Woodlot & Rachana Rajendra Neo Tropical Migrant Bird Sanctuary.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Eastern edge of Baker Woodlot, looking south, near Entrance 2.
Photo Credit: Peter H. Carrington, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
A trail within Baker Woodlot.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Baker Woodlot includes many large hardwood trees such as this Sugar Maple., Acer saccharum.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
A fruiting Conopholis americana known as Bear Corn or Cancer Root.
Photo Credit: Peter H. Carrington, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Maple seedlings in a shaded area of Baker Woodlot.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Prickly Ash, Zanthoxylum americanum.
Photo Credit: Peter H. Carrington, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Leafcup, Polymnia canadensis.
Photo Credit: Peter H. Carrington, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Trails within Baker Woodlot provide a year round opportunity to relax and enjoy nature.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Twin trunks – Tulip Tree, Liriodendron tulipifera.
Photo Credit: Peter H. Carrington, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Twin trunks - Tulip Tree, Liriodendron tulipifera, winter.
Photo Credit: Matt Chansler, MSU Herbarium.
Ephemeral pond in Baker Woodlot.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Flooding sometimes occurs in portions of Baker Woodlot, including the trails such as this one.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Don’t touch! Poison ivy, Toxicodendron radicans, grows in some areas of Baker Woodlot.
Photo Credit: Jeffrey L. Wilson, Beal Botanical Garden & Campus Arboretum.
Baker Woodlot, entrance 1, winter.
Photo Credit: Matt Chansler, MSU Herbarium.
Tree canopy in winter.
Photo Credit: Matt Chansler, MSU Herbarium.
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