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giant sequoia

Sequoiadendron giganteum

Description:

A hugh conifer. This tree is not common in Europe; It was brought by enthusiast to Europe. It may grow up to average hight of 50 - 85m. This special one is about 30 m in hight. Very soft bark.

Habitat:

mixed forest

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3 Comments

shebebusynow
shebebusynow 12 years ago

The inner bark makes a very nice cordage fiber which is soft enough to wear. The outer bark gets so thick and gnarly that it resists burning in forest fires which burn off the understory. The wood is extremely hardy, and we still have redwood stumps washing around our beaches which have been known and tracked for centuries (the same one!)

Saarbrigger
Saarbrigger 12 years ago

Thanks for these infos. The tree is just impressive and the bark is very soft. From the distance it looks hard and harsh, but if you touch it you are surprised.

shebebusynow
shebebusynow 12 years ago

This redwood looks to be just a baby! At one time, a type of redwood was native to Europe, but it's homeland (like many) has shrunk. We see them occasionally in coastal Oregon, but even there it's likely been planted (though they were native so recently they take off and do well). They can live for centuries. The name "Sequoia" comes from the Cherokee man who is the only person in known history who, speaking no other language than his own and that language not a written one, invented an 'alphabet' (actually a syllabary) for the language. The tribe became over 90% literate in their language in just a few years. Paper was essential to this process, and it came from trees, although the redwood is not generally used for paper.

Saarbrigger
Spotted by
Saarbrigger

Borzavár, Dunántúl, Hungary

Spotted on May 24, 2010
Submitted on Jun 19, 2011

Spotted for Mission

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