Horse Chestnut | Yale Nature Walk (2024)

Table of Contents
Yale Nature Walk You are here

Yale Nature Walk

  • Main Menu
  • Sub Menu

You are here

Home » Trees » Sapindaceae » Aesculus hippocastanum » Horse Chestnut

Horse Chestnut | Yale Nature Walk (1)

Basic Information

Tree ID:

9

Family:

Sapindaceae

Description:

The horse chestnut is a shade and ornamental tree with an upright elliptical shape. It is native to southeast Europe (particularly the Pindus mountains mixed forests and the Balkan mixed forests of the Balkan peninsula), but it was introduced into other parts of Europe as well as North America. The horse chestnut is easily grown from seed and tolerates city life well, which is why it is often planted along streets (Little 1980; "Herbs at a Glance", 2008). This particular horse chestnut is the gateway to the Marsh Botanical Gardens, which is just down the hill from this tree. It has a lovely view of sunset through the many other beautiful trees in the area.

Location

Area:

Marsh and Farnam Gardens

Collected Data

Tree shape:

upright ellipse

Date of tree entry:

02/05/2014

Bark

The bark is thin, smooth, and well fissured. It is gray or brown in color (Little 1980).

Twigs & branches

The twigs are light brown, stout, and have large, black sticky buds at the tips (Little 1980).

Foilage

The leaves of the horse chestnut are palmately compound with either five or seven leaflets spreading like fingers. Each individual leaflet is saw-toothed and elliptical in shape, tapering to a petiolule-less base (a petiolule is the stalk that attaches the leaflets to the leaf--petiolule is to leaflet as petiole is to leaf). The leaves are light green when they first start to grow, but as they reach maturity they become darker on top and remain lighter on the underside. In autumn, the leaves turn yellow (Little 1980).

Reproductive Structures

The horse chestnut's flowers are usually one inch (1" or 2.5 cm) in length, and have a narrow bell-shape. They are typically found in upright branched clusters, or panicles, approximately ten inches (10" or 25cm) in length (Little 1980). These clusters are popularly called "candles" in the UK because they seem to "light up the tree" ("The Woodland Trust"). Each individual flower has four or five white, fringed petals with red and yellow spots near the base (Little 1980). The horse chestnut has perfect flowers, meaning that each flower has both male and female reproductive parts ("The Woodland Trust").

Fruit

The horse chestnut's fruit is colloquially called a "conker" and refers to the shiny brown, poisonous seed that is protected by a green spiny capsule ("Kew royal botanical"). The capsule is 2-2 1/2" (5-6 cm) in diameter and splits into two or three parts to reveal one or two conkers inside (Little 1980). The conkers often have a whitish scar at the base. Conkers appear in September and fall to the ground as they ripen ("Horse chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum)"). Although conkers are poisonous for most animals when ingested, some mammals, particularly deer, are able to digest them safely ("The Woodland Trust"). Despite it being poisonous, the conker is famous for its medicinal uses as well as its starring role in the classic schoolyard game of Conkers.

Seasons
  • Horse Chestnut | Yale Nature Walk (14)

    Horse chestnut in spring

  • Horse Chestnut | Yale Nature Walk (15)

    Horse chestnut in summer

  • Horse Chestnut | Yale Nature Walk (16)

    Horse chestnut in winter

Research

Natural range of distribution:

Habitat:

The horse chestnut is native to the mixed forests of the Pindus mountains of Greece and Balkan Peninsula (including Albania, Macedonia and part of Eastern Bulgaria) but has been introduced in many urban and suburban settings, particularly in parks, large gardens, and along streets ("Horse chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum)"). The map above shows in purple the areas in Europe of introduced horse chestnuts trees (non-cultivated) and in yellow the areas where native horse chestnuts still grow (the red area is part of the native range where horse chestnuts no longer grow). The horse chestnut can grow in a variety of soils, although it prefers rich moist soils ("Horse chestnut", Little 1980).

Origin, history, and uses:

Origin
The horse chestnut is native to the Balkan peninsula in southeast Europe, and in particular the Pindus mountains mixed forests and the Balkan mixed forests(Little 1980; “Herbs at a Glance”, 2008).

History
In the 1600s, the horse chestnut was introduced in Britain, and from there eventually spread to the rest of Europe and North America(“The Woodland Trust”).

The beloved game of Conkersgot its start in the late 1700s. It was developed from a similar game called “Conquerors” which was played with hazelnuts, cobnuts, or snail shells. Soon, children throughout England and Ireland were playing Conkers in school yards, developing the game and adding rules as they went along.

During both World War I and World War II, the British government called for a collection of conkers because they serve as a source of acetone, which is used to make cordite, which is then used in military armaments. The government offered monetary rewards for a given weight of conkers collected (“Conkers - Collected for Use in Two World Wars”).

In 1965, two men got a group together after they had been drinking at a local bar, and they held the very first ever World ConkerChampionships, which are now held every year at the Ashton ConkerClub (“The History of Ashton Conker Club”).

Uses
Extract from the horse chestnut seed has been used both orally and topically to treat hemorrhoids and chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), a condition in which the veins do not sufficiently pump blood from the legs back to the heart. The active ingredient is usually 16-20% aescin. There is some evidence that suggests aescinis even more effective in treating CVI than the standard treatment, wearing compression socks. There is no evidence supporting its use in treating other conditions. If the extract is not properly processed, the poisonous compoundesculin gets left behind. Thus, homemade treatments are not recommended (“Herbs at a Glance”, 2008).

Conkers have long been used to repel spiders, but whether or not they actually repel spiders is still being debated. Some argue that the conkers themselves don’t repel spiders, but that the conkersrepel other insects that serve as the spiders’ source of food. Alternatively, the time of year at which conkers fall could just align with the disappearance of spiders and the onset of colder weather (Royal Society of Chemistry). The conkersare also used in wardrobes to ward against moths (“All About Conkers”).

The horse chestnut’s timber is not used commercially because it it too weak. However, its smooth texture and pale creamy white color make it ideal for carving(“The Woodland Trust”).

Aesculushippocastanum​ is also a favorite subject for bonsai, the Japanese art form involving growing miniature versions of trees in a pot (“Bonsai Training Guide”).

Phenology:

When the horse chestnut is young, its bark is a smooth pinky grey ("The Woodland Trust"). As the tree matures, the bark darkens and develops a scalier, more fissured texture ("The Woodland Trust"). Each year, the horse chestnut produces sticky black buds in the spring, which eventually become the clusters of white flowers seen in late spring, usually from April to mid-May. Those flowers, once pollinated by insects, each develop into a conker with a spiky green shell. The conkers reach maturity in late summer/early autumn and fall to the ground in autumn ("The Woodland Trust", "Horse chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum)", Little 1980). When the leaves of the horse chestnut first appear in spring, they are light green. However, as they reach maturity they become darker on top. In autumn, the leaves turn yellow (Little 1980).The horse chestnut can live up to 300 years, provided it does not become infected with one of the many fungal diseases and other health conditions to which the horse chestnut is susceptible. These include bleeding canker, which can cause their death; Guignardia leaf blotch; and horse chestnut scale insect. The horse chestnut leaf miner can also do the trees some damage, but it is usually not significant. The leaf miner simply causes the leaves to turn brown and fall early, but this happens so late in the season that it rarely has any effect on the tree's wellbeing ("The Woodland Trust").

References:

Aesculushippocastanum. The ICUNRed List of Threatened Species.Accessed September 8, 2014.http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/202914/0

All About Conkers. (n.d.).All About Conkers. Retrieved from http://www.worldconkerchampionships.com/html/conkers_about.html.

Anne Frank Organizations, “The Sapling Project.” Accessed February 11, 2014. http://annefrank.com/the-sapling-project/.

Bonsai Training Guide for Aesculus hippocastanum by Ma-Ke Bonsai. (n.d.).Bonsai Training Guide for Aesculus hippocastanumby Ma-Ke Bonsai. Retrieved from http://guide.makebonsai.com/bonsai_species_guide_training.asp?SpeciesID=…

Conkers - Collected for Use in Two World Wars [Radio series episode]. InMaking History. Sue Cook.

Frank, A. (1995).The Diary of a Young Girl( ed.). New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc.

Herbs at a Glance. (June 2008)National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, National Institute of Health Department of Health and Human Services.

Horse chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum). (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.arkive.org/horse-chestnut/aesculus-hippocastanum/image-A16592…

Horse chestnut. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.arborday.org/treeguide/treeDetail.cfm?ID=256

Horse chestnut. (n.d.).The Woodland Trust. Retrieved from http://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/learn/british-trees/non-native-trees/hor…

Kewroyal botanical gardens: Horse chestnut. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://apps.kew.org/trees/?page_id=98

Kiev’s Spectacular Horse Chestnut Trees. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.ukraine.com/blog/kiev-s-spectacular-horse-chestnut-trees

Lack, H. (2000). The discovery and rediscovery of the horse chestnut.Curtis’s Botanical Magazine,17(2), 109-137. Retrieved from http://arnoldia.arboretum.harvard.edu/pdf/articles/628.pdf

Little, E. L., & Bullaty, S. (1980). Horsechestnut.The Audubon Society field guide to North American trees(Chanticleer Press ed., ). New York: Knopf: distributed by Random House.

Royal Society of Chemistry. (n.d.).The Reaction News and events RSS.Retrieved fromhttp://www.thereaction.net/news/y2010/m10/spiders_versus_conkers_definit…

The History of Ashton Conker Club. (n.d.).History of the World Conker Championships. Retrieved from http://www.worldconkerchampionships.com/html/conkers_history.html

More

Other information of interest:

Originally called the “wild chestnut”, the horse chestnut got its name from the misguided belief that feeding the fruit to horses could relieve them of chest pain. In reality, it is poisonous to horses and causes them to have tremors. Additionally, the horse chestnut is only distantly related to the chestnut trees (Lack 2000). So it turns out “horse chestnut” was about as wrong of a name as possible for this tree! But perhaps its many uses and literary references have helped it to see beyond its identity crisis.

The beautifully distinctive, sweet-smelling flowers of the horse chestnut tree serve as a symbol of the city of Kiev, Ukraine where horse chestnuts are abundant. The trees came into popularity in the early nineteenth century, when city planners started planting them along streets and throughout parks. They can be found at the Orthodox monastery of Pechersk Lavra, as well as at the Kiev botanical gardens. Although pollution can reduce the horse chestnut’s lifespan from hundreds of years to just one hundred years, there are a few in Kiev that have been around since the early 1800s, blooming each year so visitors and residents alike can enjoy their beautiful flowers (“Kiev’s Spectacular Horse-Chestnut Trees”).

The Anne Frank Tree

In Anne Frank’s The Diary of a Young Girl, she describes a horse chestnut tree that resided in the center of Amsterdam, writing, “Nearly every morning I go to the attic to blow the stuffy air out of my lungs, from my favorite spot on the floor I look up at the blue sky and the bare chestnut tree, on whose branches little raindrops shine, appearing like silver, and at the seagulls and other birds as they glide on the wind. As long as this exists, I thought, and I may live to see it, this sunshine, the cloudless skies, while this lasts I cannot be unhappy” (Frank).

In 2010, the tree fell in a storm after it had been weakened for many years by disease. It was estimated to be between 150 and 170 years old. Several saplings were prepared in the years leading up to the tree’s death, eleven of which have been distributed throughout the United States. The saplings can be found at the White House; the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis where the saplings were originally quarantined upon entry into the U.S.; Sonoma State University in California; Southern Cayuga School District in New York; the Washington State Holocaust Resource Center; Boston Common; the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills, Michigan; the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial; the William J. Clinton Presidential Center in Arkansas; and Liberty Park at Ground Zero in New York City, which commemorates the 9/11 terrorist attacks (“Sapling Project”).

The Honorable Game of Conkers

How to play:
The rules for preparing aconkerand playingConkersvaries between the playground and the World Championships. For the World Championships, players are forbidden to bring their ownconkersfor fear that they would cheat by hardening theirconkersthrough a number of techniques. This is considered cheating, and while it is permissible in the schoolyard, the World Championships attempt to keep a level playing field by providingconkersfor all participants (“All AboutConkers”).

Preparing your ownconker:
Choose aconkerthat is big,round (as symmetrical as possible), and shiny (indicative of health). Drill a hole through the middle of theconkerwith a skewer or a similar device, being very careful as you do so not to harm theconkeror your hand. Thread a piece of string through the hole and tie a knot at the end. The string shouldbe long enough that when it is wrapped twice around your hand there arestill approximately 10 inches (25 cm) left fortheconkerto hang down from your hand (“All AboutConkers”).

Hardening techniques (“All About Conkers”):

  • soaking or boilingin vinegar or salt water
  • soaking in parafin
  • partially baking for about one half hour in the oven
  • coating with clear nail polish
  • fillingwith glue
  • storing in the dark for a year

Rules of play (on the playground): (note: the following rules were taken directly from theWorldConkerChampionships’ website)

A coin toss usually decides who takes the first swing inConkers, but on the playground this is more often a matter of whoever shouts “Obli,obli, oh, my first go” (or something similar) first. Eachplayerhas his or herconkeron a knotted string. Players take turns hitting each other’sconkerwith their own.Theplayer whoseconkeris to be hit first lets it hang down approximately 10 inches (25 cm) fromthestring which is wrapped round his hand. Theplayer must hold it at the height his opponent chooses and he must hold it perfectly still. His opponent, the striker, wraps hisconkerstring round his hand. He then takes theconkerin the other hand and draws it back for the strike. Releasing theconker, he swings it down by the string held in the other hand and tries to hit hisopponent’sconkerwith it. If he misses he is allowed up to two further goes. If the strings tangle, the first player to call “strings” or “snags” gets an extra shot. Players take alternate hits at their opponent’sconker. The game is won when one player destroys the other’sconker. If a player drops hisconkeror it isknocked from his hand, the other player can shout “stamps” and immediately stamp on theconker; but should its owner first shout “no stamps”, then “stamps” is disallowed and theconker(hopefully) remains intact (“All AboutConkers”).

Rules of play (WorldConkerChampionships): (note: the following rules were taken directly from the WorldConkerChampionships’ website)

Competition rules do not allow “stamps”,while “snags” do not give an extra swing. In fact, causing snags is considered bad sportsmanship and can be grounds fordisqualification. Full rules can be found here:http://www.worldconkerchampionships.com/html/conkers_rules.html
(“All AboutConkers”).

Scoring:

In playground tournaments, each victory adds to a conker’s score. A conkerwho has one two battles, for example, is called a “two-er”. When a conker beats another conker, though, it absorbs the losing conker’s score. For example, if a “two-er” beat a “fiver”, it would become an “eight-er” (its two, the other conker’s five, and an additional one for the win over the “fiver”). As a result, winning conkers can quickly attain very large scores (“All About Conkers”).

Media and Arts
  • ← Previous Tree: Epaulette Tree
  • Next Tree: Dead Man's Fingers →
Horse Chestnut
 | Yale Nature Walk (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aracelis Kilback

Last Updated:

Views: 5873

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (44 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aracelis Kilback

Birthday: 1994-11-22

Address: Apt. 895 30151 Green Plain, Lake Mariela, RI 98141

Phone: +5992291857476

Job: Legal Officer

Hobby: LARPing, role-playing games, Slacklining, Reading, Inline skating, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Dance

Introduction: My name is Aracelis Kilback, I am a nice, gentle, agreeable, joyous, attractive, combative, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.