slgwv

slgwv club

Posted: 17 Sep 2016


Taken: 14 Aug 2016

1 favorite     6 comments    280 visits

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Keywords

California
USA
Sierra Nevada
juniper
8170
large
Juniperus occidentalis australis
Sierra juniper
Juniperus grandis
western juniper


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280 visits


IMG 8170

IMG 8170

Pam J has particularly liked this photo


6 comments - The latest ones
 Pam J
Pam J club
Beautiful
7 years ago.
 Don Barrett (aka DBs travels)
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club
That looks to be an unusually robust juniper -- awfully thick trunk.
7 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
As I commented to Gudrun, I've got a whole collection of photos of such trees: www.ipernity.com/doc/289859/album/735131. We'd first heard about such occurrences from the proprietor of the lodge at Rock Creek, and now we see them all over the eastern Sierra, high on the drier slopes! It's an astonishing occurrence for a tree more typical of the semiarid scrub.
7 years ago.
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club has replied to slgwv club
Thanks for the link, some wonderful pictures. I need to get better at identifying trees -- now I'm wondering if some of what I thought were bristlecone pines were similar junipers.
7 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
Thanks! Now that my eyes are calibrated, I take pictures of every one I see-- ;)
Bristlecones are distinctive because of the "bottlebrush" arrangement of the short needles on the twigs. Western red cedar has similar bark to these trees, and aren't conifers, but the fronds are flat. They also live in microenvironments that are _wetter_ than the local norm.
7 years ago.
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club has replied to slgwv club
I would've failed in the 'natural' sciences -- I just don't have the interest in details necessary for classification!
7 years ago.

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