In memory of Andy, with love
Pathway
Berries of red branch dogwood
Grandson
Clyde in the water tub...
The guest trailer
Fernando
Grandson's Angus cattle
Farmall
Ford tractor
Moore Park
Klamath Lake
Late afternoon
Late afternoon
Parking lot decorations
Cozy baby
Clyde in landscape
Spare wire
Ernie in landscape
Bare branches
Happy Easter!
Funny Bunny
Galloping dog
Big tank
UTLX
Framework
Bell pepper terror
I swear I did not do this
Pure fragrance
The towering lilac
Japanese maple
1949 GMC 150
Tanks in fog
Mount Shasta with lenticular cloud
Lenticular cloud
Rusty
Overhead Door
Cloud factory
Моє серце з Україною
My aurora borealis
Scrumptious
Delicious
I had a big blue thing
A fury
Frosty morning in March
1/120 • f/2.4 • 3.1 mm • ISO 50 •
LG Electronics LM-X210
See also...
See more...Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
120 visits
Blue Atlas cedar


Needles are very short, about 3/4" or 2cm. It's a very attractive, fluffy tree. Not a spruce, as I had originally thought. The needles are too short to be a spruce or a pine. After some lengthy comparing of needles and growth habits, I finally arrived at what I believe is the proper identification. The Blue Atlas Cedar is a good, tidy landscape tree. This one was not "in nature," but planted near a business.
Identifying the different conifers can be very confusing. There are "old world conifers" and "new world conifers" to make it seem even more baffling. gardenerspath.com/plants/landscape-trees/identifying-conifers
Identifying the different conifers can be very confusing. There are "old world conifers" and "new world conifers" to make it seem even more baffling. gardenerspath.com/plants/landscape-trees/identifying-conifers
John FitzGerald, Ulrich John, Keith Burton have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
A fascinating link too.............I had no idea Conifer identification was so complex!
Diane Putnam club has replied to Keith Burton clubSign-in to write a comment.