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In the deep forests, Noble Fir is a magnificent, majestic and symmetrically formed “tree fir” having a straight clear trunk frequently for 100 feet or more. It towers to a height of from 150 to 200 or more feet, and has a trunk diameter of two to five feet. Trees 250 feet tall and more than six feet in diameter have been found. The branches are short, rigid, and stand out almost at right angles to the trunk except for the lower limbs which have a tendency to droop somewhat. The well-formed crown is rounded and narrow. The needles, growing thick on the twig and curving upward, are a pale to dark bluish-green with a silvery tinge, are one-half to one inch long, grooved on the upper surface and usually
sharp pointed. The needles particularly distinguish this tree from all other firs. The large oblong and resin-coated cones, too, are distinctive. They are light yellowsih-green; are four and one-half to six inches long with blunt ends, and stand erect on the twig. The cone scales protrude somewhat, overlap shingle fashion and have large sharply pointed bracts. When mature, the cones turn a light yellowish-brown color. In the early lumbering days Noble Fir was erroneously called Larch or sometimes Red Fir. The tree, however, does not in the least resemble Western Larch either in appearance or properties of the wood.
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