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Mark A. Miller
(Corkbark Fir)
Very tall and narrow in form, corkbark fir looks like a silvery green church spire. A cone-bearing evergreen tree with green needles that have a silver-blue cast, this natural variety of the subalpine fir is native to the southern Rocky Mountains in Arizona and New Mexico in the American Southwest. Its soft bark is gray to nearly white, smooth but mildly bumpy, and thicker than the typical subalpine fir.
The short but flattened needles whorl around the tree's twigs. They are dark green but covered...
Russell Stafford
(Compact Corkbark Fir, Corkbark Fir)
Unlike its parent, the spire-like subalpine fir, compact corkbark fir looks like a silvery green plump pyramid at maturity. A cone-bearing evergreen shrub with green needles that have a silver-blue cast, 'Compacta' was selected from trees native to the southern Rocky Mountains in Arizona and New Mexico in the American Southwest. Its rarely seen soft bark is gray to nearly white, smooth but mildly bumpy, and thicker than the typical subalpine fir.
The short but flattened needles whorl around the...
(Turkish Fir)
The Turkish fir is every bit like a Nordman fir except it doesn't mature nearly as large and has a greater tolerance to alkaline soils. Turkish fir grows naturally at high elevations in the mountains from roughly Athens, Greece to Istanbul, Turkey and the adjacent Bithynia region. Turkish fir essentially is an isolated population of Nordman firs that evolved and survived on cooler, northern-facing slopes in the region.
Turkish fir has an upright, narrow and columnar form with a partially rounded...
James H. Schutte
(Barney Turkish Fir, Turkish Fir)
The Turkish fir is every bit like a Nordman fir except it doesn't mature nearly as large and has a greater tolerance to alkaline soils. Turkish fir grows naturally at high elevations in the mountains from roughly Athens, Greece to Istanbul, Turkey and the adjacent Bithynia region. Turkish fir essentially is an isolated population of Nordman firs that evolved and survived on cooler, northern-facing slopes in the region.
Turkish fir has an upright, narrow and columnar form with a partially rounded...
James H. Schutte
(Franke Turkish Fir, Turkish Fir)
The Turkish fir is every bit like a Nordman fir except it doesn't mature nearly as large and has a greater tolerance to alkaline soils. Turkish fir grows naturally at high elevations in the mountains from roughly Athens, Greece to Istanbul, Turkey and the adjacent Bithynia region. Turkish fir essentially is an isolated population of Nordman firs that evolved and survived on cooler, northern-facing slopes in the region.
Turkish fir has an upright, narrow and columnar form with a partially rounded...
Jesse Saylor
(Christmastree, Veitch Fir)
A handsome evergreen with deep green needles that curved upwards to reveal the silvery undersides, veitch fir also produces purplish cones. A tall conifer evergreen that is relatively fast-growing, it is native to central and southern Japan. Its smooth bark is sandy brown to gray in hue.
The non-prickly needles are short and glossy, dark green with silver to blue-green undersides. Needles densely line the branches' end twigs. Male and female cones are borne in late spring; the female cones become...