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Price: $95 Tree type: Douglas Fir Mount Eagle Tree Shop The City of Angels isn't known for being the cheapest place to live, and any six-foot tree you're looking for will generally cost around $100.
Douglas-fir is one of the world's best timber-producing species and yields more timber than any other species in North America, making the forestlands of western Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia the most productive on the continent. In 2011, Douglas-fir represented 34.2% of US lumber exports, to a total of 1.053 billion board-feet.
Spruce-pine-fir (SPF) is a classification of lumber that can be traded on commodities exchanges. In Canada , and parts of the United States , most of the spruce tree species , pine tree species , and fir tree species share similar physical and mechanical characteristics, to the point where lumber derived from any of these species are ...
In the United States, pilings are mainly cut from southern yellow pines and Douglas-fir. Treated pilings are available in chromated copper arsenate retentions of 0.60, 0.80 and 2.50 pounds per cubic foot (9.6, 12.8 and 40.0 kg/m 3 ) if treatment is required.
Pseudotsuga japonica, the Japanese Douglas-fir, is a species of conifer in the pine family, Pinaceae, that is endemic to Japan. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It is a medium-sized tree growing to 25 m (82 ft) tall. [ 3 ]
Cedar hemlock douglas-fir forest is a vegetation association in California, United States. This is one of the Kuchler system forest types used to classify California plant communities. [1] As the name implies, dominant tree types are Incense cedar, Western Hemlock and Douglas fir. The forest type is classified FRES20 in the Kuchler system. [2]
Douglas fir and aspen forest is a plant community or vegetation type of the mountains of the western United States, dominated by Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) ...
Many are also decorative garden trees, notably Korean fir and Fraser's fir, which produce brightly coloured cones even when very young, still only 1–2 m (3 ft 3 in – 6 ft 7 in) tall. Many fir species are grown in botanic gardens and other specialist tree collections in Europe and North America.