Hey guys. My aunt and I were looking at these and wondering what they are. They are tomato sized, no smell, with pits. I can't find them on Google. Any ideas? We don't dare taste them.
The inside.
The pit. Sorry if the pictures aren't the best. Phone camera was shattered and I cleaned it up as best I could.
I should add that these grew on her treeline, and nothing has ever grown there as far as we know. They commonly get logs delivered, and there is a corn field on the other side of the tree line, but beyond that I don't know.
JUST occurred to me that the region actually matters in this situation. We live in Vermont, which is northeastern U.S.
Bump. Anyone know what it could possibly be?
>>1084755
The pictures aren't enough for me to try and key it, but pretty sure you have an Amalanchier or Malus on your hands. Or if the tree has big pointy thorns, Crataegus. Also check your googles for Rose Hips.
I have a pretty solid suspicion that her plant is in the family Rosaceae, which includes a metric fuckton of fruit trees.
>>1084845
my bet is some kind of rosehip too, especially given the insides
>>1084755
Is probably rosehip, good eats.