It is a
deciduous shrub or small
tree, reaching a height of , rarely to 13 m. The
leaves are 3–12 cm long and from 2–8 cm wide, broader than most other willows. The
flowers are soft silky, and silvery 3-7-cm-long
catkins are produced in early spring before the new leaves appear; the male and female catkins are on different plants (
dioecious). The male catkins mature yellow at
pollen release, the female catkins mature pale green. The
fruit is a small
capsule 5–10 mm long containing numerous minute
seeds embedded in fine, cottony hairs. The seeds are very small (about 0.2 mm) with the fine hairs aiding dispersal; they require bare
soil to
germinate. The two
varieties are: •
S. c. var.
caprea - lowland regions throughout the range, leaves thinly hairy above, densely hairy below, 5–12 cm long, stipules persistent until autumn •
S. c. var.
sphacelata (Sm.) Wahlenb. (syn.
S. caprea var.
coaetanea Hartm.;
S. coaetanea (Hartm.) Floderus) - high altitudes in the mountains of central and northern Europe (Alps, Carpathians, Scotland, Scandinavia), leaves densely silky-hairy on both sides, 3–7 cm long, stipules early deciduous. In western Norway there are trees of S. c. var 'Sphacelata' that are 18–20 meters tall and have mostly single trunks. ==Name==