|

MONTANA’S NATIVE EVERGREENS by Jan Cashman 11/17/06
If you’re hiking around our forests
with your permit, looking for the perfect Christmas tree, it might
be nice to know the correct names of the evergreen trees found
there. Even if you don’t go hunting for your
Christmas tree in the surrounding mountains, it is good to have
some knowledge of Montana’s native conifers.
Montana is a big state with different climates. The
eastern part of the state is dry with alkaline soils. Rocky Mountain
junipers and Eastern ponderosa pines are native there. West of the divide
in the forested mountains north of Missoula, where winters are overcast with
heavy snowfall, we find other conifers: white pine, white spruce, hemlock,
grand fir, and western red cedar. There are even some Pacific yews in
this far northwestern corner of Montana.
Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopulorum)
is indigenous in almost every county in Montana, sometimes growing into a bushy
shrub, sometimes growing very tall, depending upon soils and climate. Our
90-year-old friend from Culbertson, Montana, remembers cutting down these junipers
or “cedar bushes” for Christmas trees when she was a child. Today,
junipers are seldom used for Christmas trees—theirs is not the traditional
Christmas tree look. Junipers’ wood is hard, and though gnarled,
has been used for fence posts because it doesn’t rot. Selections
of Rocky Mountain junipers make drought tolerant, nicely shaped evergreens
for your landscape.
As far as I know, Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii)
is the only spruce native to Montana. It is found in the western half
of the state in cool mountain canyons along streams and lakesides and at high
elevations. Jerry has noticed a large stand of them south of the entrance
to Big Sky. Unlike the blue-tinged Colorado spruce, Engelmann spruce’s
needles are green. Their branches droop. On either side of Cashman
Nursery are huge (60 foot) Engelmann spruce that were transplanted from the
mountains by the original owner of the property. Colorado spruce is the
spruce most often planted when a large specimen conifer is wanted in the landscape,
but Engelmann spruce could also be used.
Although Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga mensiesii) is
similar in many ways to firs, it is not a true fir. The genus for firs is Abies. Meriwether
Lewis noted Douglas-fir in his journals. He saw it from central Montana
all the way to the coast of Oregon, where some were growing as tall as 300
feet. Douglas-fir is the common Christmas tree cut from the surrounding
mountains. It is also used extensively for lumber and plywood.
Alpine or subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) is a
tall, narrow fir that grows at very high elevations throughout the western
half of Montana and west. You see them growing beneath you as you
ride the Bridger Bowl chair lift. Loggers call subalpine fir “piss
fir” for the needles’ unpleasant odor. Even so, alpine fir
is sought after as a Christmas tree because of its narrow shape and layered
branches.
Limber, Ponderosa and lodgepole pines are all native
to Montana. Limber pine (Pinus flexilis) is found mainly
in southwestern Montana. Because limber pine grows in dry, harsh sites,
it is often shrubby, twisted, and stunted—an interesting tree, but of
little commercial value. Jerry says you can actually tie the twigs
into a knot, hence the name.
Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) is the state
tree of Montana. Southeastern Montana
has native stands of Ponderosa
from Big Timber east. Western Montana is full of them.
Our daughter, who lives in
Frenchtown near the Clarkfork River, has Ponderosa pines
near her home that are huge— it would take 3 people to reach
around them. Ponderosa
pines west of the divide grow
taller and bigger than those east of the divide, with longer
needles, even though they are
the same genus and species. There are few, if any,
native
Ponderosa pines in the Gallatin
Valley, but they grow well here and are a beautiful,
hardy pine for landscapes. We make sure the Ponderosas we
sell are from an eastern
source and, therefore, better
adapted to our area. The big, round cones of Ponderosa
pines make great seasonal decorations;
I keep some in a pretty basket in the entryway to
our home all year.
Lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) is so named
because the Indians and pioneers used the trees to build their lodges. Lodgepole
pines, along with Douglas fir, make up a good part of the native forest in
the western half of Montana. Fast-growing lodgepole pines are tall and
slender and come up quickly after a forest fire. Though seldom used in
the landscape, they grow into an attractive, full tree when not too crowded.
Native plants are hardy and drought tolerant. Xeriscaping,
landscaping with drought tolerant plants, is still a trend because it conserves
water and the plants fit naturally into their surrounding environment. Some
new subdivisions are only allowing the planting of natives. Whether
you are cutting your Christmas tree from the forest or choosing an evergreen
for your yard at a nursery next spring, consider the native conifers.
|