Planted:

This can be found at the east end of the Grass Path, on the north side.

Distribution:Native to Europe, western and central Asia.
Planting Date:Self sown
Growth Habit:A multi-stemmed deciduous shrub that responds well to coppicing – regular cutting down to ground level. The resulting stumps are called stools.
Bark:Smooth grey-brown – peels with age.
Leaf:Rounded, 6 to 12 cm long and across, softly hairy on both surfaces, and with a double-serrate margin. 
Flowers:Produced very early in spring, before the leaves, and are monoecious with single-sex wind-pollenated catkins. Male catkins are pale yellow and 5 to 12 cm long, while female flowers are very small and largely concealed in the buds with only the bright red 1 to 3 mm styles visible. 
Fruit:The nut is produced in clusters of one to five, each held in a short leafy involucre (husk) which encloses about three-quarters. Roughly spherical to oval, 15 to 20 mm long and 12 to 20 mm broad (larger, in some cultivated selections), yellow-brown with a pale scar at the base. The nut falls out of the involucre when ripe, about 7–8 months after pollination.
Toxicity:A valuable food source – rich in protein and unsaturated fat. They also contain significant amounts of trace elements.
Potential tree size:3 to 8m
Uses:An important component of hedgerows.
Mainly cultivated for its nuts.
The wood was traditionally grown as coppice, with the cut poles being used in agriculture.
Plant Hunter:Native
Introduction Date:Native
Anecdotes and Comments:The scientific name avellana was selected by Linnaeus in 1542. It derives from the name of a town in Italy where the species was described as Avellana nux sylvestris ‘wild nut of Avella’.