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History: Lodgepole Pine
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Source of version: 17
(current)
{trackerlist trackerId="5" wiki="Softwoods.info" view="page"} !The Tree The Lodgepole Pine is a straight tree from 60 to 150 feet tall and 12 to 86 inches in diameter, and grows from low elevations in the north up to 11,500 feet in the south. It is typically a Northern Rocky Mountain pine. For a long time this tree was rated very low as a timber tree because of its knotty lumber and the rather poor quality of the wood. It grows in dense stands of tall straight trees. The bark is a quarter of an inch thick, a pale brown or grayish color with many thin irregular scales. The bright yellowish-green needles, usually about two inches long, grow in pairs. The shiny light yellowish-brown to dark brown cones up to two inches long, frequently grow in clusters. The cone scales have a sharp prickle. Some of the cones open at maturity, while others remain on the tree for several years before opening to release the seed. Because of the dense stands of the tree, serious damage is done to it by forest fires. The tree also suffers great damage from mistletoe and fungi, bark beetles, and porcupines. {img type="fileId" fileId="125" thumb="box" height="220" desc="Fox Tail Pine (left), Lodgepole Pine (right)" alt="pine trunk" stylebox="border"} {img type="fileId" fileId="126" thumb="box" height="220" desc="Lodgepole Pine Cone" alt="pine cone" featured="y" stylebox="border"} !Common Names in Use * Lodgepole Pine (Wyo., Wash., Mont., Idaho., Colo.) * Prickly Pine (Utah) * Sand Pine (Oreg) * Birdseye Pine (Idaho., Wyo.) * Scrub Pine * Black Pine (Wyo., Mont.) * Shore Pine (lit) * Bolander’s Pine * Spruce Pine (Colo., Idaho., Mont.) * Henderson’s Pine * Tamarack Pine (Calif., Wash.) * Jack Pine (Colo.) * Tamarack (Wyo., Utah., Mont., Calif., and trade) * Knotty Pine * Murray Pine (Calif., lit.) * Twisted Pine (Eastern States) * North Coast Scrub Pine (Calif., lit.) * White Pine (Mont., Colo.) !Growth Range The growth range of Lodgepole Pine is from southern Alaska, western Canada southward through Washington, Oregon and California and eastward into most of the Rocky Mountain region as far south as New Mexico and northern Utah. !The Wood The heartwood varies in color from a light yellow to a creamy yellowish light brown-tan sometimes having a reddish tinge, while the sapwood is narrow and nearly white. The wood is moderately hard, stiff, straight grained, medium fine-textured, and brittle. It contains numerous fine resin ducts which exude resin. It is easy to work, glues well and holds paint reasonably well. The tangential surfaces frequently have a “dimpled” or pebbled appearance resembling “bird’s-eye” because of which it is sometimes called Bird’s-eye Pine. !Uses At present Lodgepole Pine is used chiefly for mine props, railroad ties, telephone and telegraph poles, fence posts, house logs, paper pulp and some general construction. Doubtless it will have greater use in interior furnishing as “knotty pine” and as box lumber and siding, etc. The unusual specimen above displays the “bird’s-eye” figure sometimes found in Lodgepole Pine. It is caused by resin secretions on the inside of the bark, and as the tree grows a “dimpled” effect is produced in the wood. !File References {files fileId="124:125:126" showaction="y" showicon="y" showfilename="n" showdescription="y" showlasteditor="n"} {showreference showtitle="yes" hlevel="1"}
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