Conifers


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Brewers Spruce
Deodar Cedar
Chinese fir
Juniper
Incense Cedar
Lots of cones
Jeza Spruce
Giant Redwood
Big Cone Douglas Fir
Bhutan Pine
Lawson's Cypress
Monterey Cypress
Sitka Spruce
Chinese Fir
Oriental Spruce
Thuja
Cedar of Lebanon
Stone Pine
Juniper
Giant Redwood
Leylandii
Japanese Red Cedar (2).jpg
Noble Fir
Scots Pine
Dawn Cedar
Patagonian Cypress
Lawson Cypress
Incense Cedar
Jeffrey Pine
Tiger Tail Spruce
Taiwania
Sequoia
Eastern Hemlock
Western Hemlock
Sequoia
Leylandii
Coast Redwood
Spanish Fir
Norway Spruce
Japanese Douglas Fir
Corsican Pine
Carolina Hemlock
Umbrella Pine
Swamp Cypress & Dawn Redwood
Western Himalayan Pine
Maritime Pine
Monterey Pine
Norway Spruce
Japanese Red Cedar
Sitka Spruce
Oriental Pine
Douglas Fir
Western Red Cedar
Montezuma Pine
Western Hemlock
Larch
Nootka
Dunkeld Larch
Brewers Spruce
Deodar Cedar
Chinese fir
Juniper
Incense Cedar
Lots of cones
Jeza Spruce
Giant Redwood
Big Cone Douglas Fir
Bhutan Pine
Lawson's Cypress
Monterey Cypress
 

Conifers

We’ve always been lovers of traditional broadleaf woodland.  Most of the conifers we’ve encountered have been in plantations, where they’re been planted to produce timber in a short time frame.  Conifer plantations can sometimes seem sterile in comparison to a broadleaf woodland, with the floor devoid of anything other than needles and the odd wood ant colony.  Often trees fall over because they have a shallow root system.  Still, they can be a useful resource for our bushcraft (although we don’t have any in our ancient woodland), and make shelter building straightforward as well as firewood collection easy, but overall, we prefer broadleaf.

After a visit to Bedgebury Pinetum a few years back, and seeing conifers left to grow as they would in the wild, we changed our minds a little about them.  Some of the trees were stunning and looked nothing like their cousins in a plantation, for example the western hemlock was nothing like the ones we were familiar with from plantations such as Clowes Wood.  If you’re into facts and figures, conifers provide the record breakers as far as trees are concerned – the tallest, widest, heaviest, oldest trees are all species of conifer.

You can find loads of photos of our ancient broadleaf woodland, and of our courses, on our Facebook page.