May be the other side of the Pacific.Huh, I had no idea we had a native yew species.
They're not very common. Every now and then you may notice one in the forest, then not see any others the rest of the day.Huh, I had no idea we had a native yew species.
Very cool! Thanks for that info. I didn’t know there was a native to North America either.They're not very common. Every now and then you may notice one in the forest, then not see any others the rest of the day.
Our most shade tolerant tree. 99% of the time they’re in the understory. Usually in older and wet forests. They layer extremely well, which helps them to spread vegetatively. They take forever to grow. 30’ is tall. 12” diameter is a considerable trunk size. Most trees take well over 100 years to get that big. I had an 8 incher that was 117yrs.
Most people mistake them for western hemlock which is also often found in the understory. But yew has sparser foliage and new stems are green for the first couple years.
The trees have medicinal properties that are linked to cancer drugs, but eating most parts of it can kill a person.
The wood is very strong and resists rot. It is a choice wood for crafted bows. Since the trees take forever to grow and usually are not straight it fetches a high price.
Great trees.
They have evidence that armies in europe had suitable ancient yew trees they harvested boughs for bows every few decades. Very stong an resilient wood. So rare to find or detect one in the wild in the PNWHave you found any large ones for collection? i.e., do they gain the traits we generally look for in yamadori?
I ask because so many of the great yews in Europe are from hedging or other human cultivation rather than collected from the wild.
Yes I’ve found some big trunks but they often come attached to larger trees, not compacted ones.Have you found any large ones for collection? i.e., do they gain the traits we generally look for in yamadori?
I ask because so many of the great yews in Europe are from hedging or other human cultivation rather than collected from the wild.
I have not tried taking cuttings but according to this paper it can be done.After some growth, I wonder if they will strike cuttings easily like other yews.
The characteristics sound like they would be a great species for bonsai.
Nice looking tree.This tree had a strong growing season.
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It could be turned into a nice raft.
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Increased light has lead to morphological changes in the needles. They are not as dark or flatly-arranged as shaded needles.
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