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Original Species
paper by Lois Wythe
Western
Redcedar
Thuja
picata Donn
The Latin name, Thuja
picata Donn, refers to a tree having sweet-smelling wood whose leaves
are plaited or folded.
Western Redcedars
are heavily buttressed trees 150 feet to 175 feet high, and five to eight
feet in diameter, where they have been allowed to remain naturally.
Until this decade, exceptional trees would reach heights of
200 feet, with diameters as much as ten to sixteen feet.
The really large trees are now found mostly in protected reserves and
areas. The center of large
trees is usually hollow. In
densely crowded stands, the trees have long, clear trunks.
The narrow conical crown of young trees reaches to the ground,
and even in dense stands the lower branches are retained until the tree
reaches heights of 50 feet to 80 feet. In
old trees, the crown becomes short and blunt.
On young trees, the slender limbs curve upward, but with age,
they swing downward in a long graceful curve.
While diameters of 24 to 40 inches are reached in 200 to 500
years, some of the largest trees are believed to be 800 to 1000 years
old. Latest data available
shows the 1979 Idaho
champion was 177 feet tall, 680 inches in circumference, with a 9.9 foot
crown, and was located on Palouse Road
in the Clearwater
National Forest.
The strongly aromatic
wood is reddish brown when freshly cut, but becomes dull brown with
exposure. It is free from
pitch, of medium to course grain, is very soft and brittle, and is
unusually resistant to decay and insects.
It scarcely warps or shrinks and the Indians of our area used it
for totem poles, canoes, lodges, and teepee poles.
Beautiful, flat lacy
sprays of scale-like, bright green leaves and upturned, leathery brown
cones are characteristic of this tree.
Glossy above, distinctly darker with fragrant white triangular
spots beneath, they remain on the tree about 3 years.
The cinnamon red, fibrous bark is less than an inch thick.
The thin bark is so tough that the Indians peeled strips 20 to 30
ft long from young trees for making baskets, and it was even used for
rope or fish line.
One of the most interesting feature of our
Western Redcedar
is the life cycle of the cones it produces.
In the tree key author Herbert Edlin describes this cycle as
follows: “Thuca cedars bear small, oval, reddish male flower
groups, later yellow with pollen, near shoot bases in spring.
Minute female flowers, cone-like green or purple, arise on very
short stalks on outer branchlets. Cones
ripen brown leaf-like scales in autumn, then open from tight ovals to
spreading clusters. Tiny
brown oval seeds, each with a narrow pale brown wing on either side,
escape and are spread by wind. Seedlings
raise two oval seed leaves, then a shoot with simple narrow needles
projecting all around. Adult
fern-front foliage first appears on side shoots, usually in the second
year.”
These redcedars are the darlings of crafters who use them often in floral
crafts and potpourri. Although
the wood of the Thuca redcedars is the valuable economic product, the cones
sell from $5 to $10 per pound wholesale, and the green redcedar tips,
called “fans” bring an equal price and lend color and scent to
floral products.
In some years the cone
production is really prodigious. 2000 was a year of heavy cone
production, while 2002 produced a lighter crop, perhaps being due to a
very dry year.
A household use for redcedar foliage is in the repelling of insects, and cedar chips are a
well-known filler for pet bedding.
At the Arboretum we
have many handsome specimens of fully mature trees.
An especially beautiful redcedar is at the Arboretum entrance near
the log cabin.
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