News

The eastern red cedar falls into this camp, and keeping this single rule in mind will help you play it safe if you decide to forage the berries. Wild food is all around us in central Virginia.
Eastern red cedar or Juniperus virginiana is not a true ... The bark has shedding thin strips, the seed cones are berry-like and glaucous (blueish), the leaves are scale-like and pressed tightly ...
This week, we meet Eastern red cedar or Juniperus virginiana ... The fruit of red cedar is a small cone, which resembles and is often referred to as a berry, that is blue in color and features a ...
Eastern Red Cedar Provides An Important Source Of Food For Over 50 Bird Species The small, berry-like fruits of the eastern ...
Since it is not a true Red Cedar it is spelled as one word: redcedar. Eastern redcedars can be found ... The female trees have blueish quarter-inch berry-like cones that resemble juniper berries ...
The eastern red cedar is regarded as a tree of life. Like hollies, red cedar is dioecious, so only female plants produce the bluish berries loved by cedar waxwings and other migratory birds.
Dry conditions, high winds, and one Oklahoma tree have fanned the flames. Q: How does the Eastern Red Cedar affect communities? A: The water off Arcadia Lake has been the antidote to nature's ...
An over-population of Eastern red cedar trees is like a cancer to the rangeland—aggressive, widespread and time-consuming to eradicate. Landowners in the High Plains have fought these ...
Register for more free articles. Sign up for our newsletter to keep reading. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox!