User blog:Epiphlyte/Western Hemlock (Tsugo heterophyllo)

WESTERN HEMLOCK (Tsugo heterophyllo)

A large tree, it usually grows 30 to 50 metres tall. It has a rather narrow crown and conspicuously drooping new growth at the top of the tree. It has mostly down-sweeping branches and delicate feathery foliage.

LEAVES

Needles are nearly flat, glossy, and soft; yellow to dark green on the upper surface and whitish underneath. The needles are unequal in length and produce feathery, flat sprays. Where to find western hemlock It grows along both the east and west sides of the Coast Ranges, from sea level to mid elevations, as well as in the Interior wet belt west of the Rocky Mountains.

CONES

The small, numerous seed cones are greenish to reddish-purple and turn brown with age.

BARK

Dark brown to reddish-brown, becoming thick and strongly grooved with age.

WESTERN HEMLOCK ON THE MAP OF B.C

It grows along both the east and west sides of the Coast Ranges, from sea level to mid elevations, as well as in the Interior wet belt west of the Rocky Mountains

HABITAT

Western hemlock usually grows with many different tree species. Occasionally, it develops in pure groups of trees after a wind has blown many trees over. Its shallow rooting system makes it susceptible to being blown over by wind as well as being damaged by fIre.

USES

Coastal people carved hemlock wood, which is fairly easily worked, into spoons, combs, roasting spits, and other implements. The Haida carved the wood from bent trunks into giant feast dishes. Sometimes hemlock roots were spliced onto bull kelp fIshing lines to strengthen them. Hemlock bark is rich in a substance useful for tanning hides. The Saanich people made a red dye which not only coloured wool but also added colour to cheeks and removed facial hair. The Nisga'a and Gitksan peoples scraped off the inner bark in spring and baked it into cakes. A favorite way to prepare the dried cambium in winter was to whip it with snow and eulachon grease. The wood has an even grain and resists scraping, which makes it easy to machine. It is widely used for doors, windows, parts of staircases, ladders and other architectural millwork items. ).

NOTES

Hemlock was named after a European weed which has a similar smell.

Western hemlock is not related to poison hemlock, the weed which killed Socrates.

Tsuga is from the Japanese Tsu-ga, the elements for "tree" and "mother," and beteropbylla is Greek for "different leaves."