British Columbia Outdoor Wilderness Guide |
TAMARACK
LARCH
larix laricina
- The
Tamarack Larch is also known as Eastern
Larch, Hackmatack, Alaska Larch, America
Larch, Black Larch, Tamarack
- 'laricina'
is Latin for "larch-like"
- 'tamarack'
is from the Algonquin word 'akemantak'
which means "wood used for snowshoes"
UNIQUE
FEATURES:
- like
all larches, the Tamarack Larch has deciduous
foliage (needles) but drops them in the
fall like leaves
LOCATION:
- Tamarack
Larch grows mainly east of the Rockies
- there
are a few isolated groups in the Nechako
Valley
- Tamarack
Larch can live on poorly drained soils
- bogs and swamps - as well as on cool,
moist, north-facing slopes
SIZE:
- this
small, slender tree rarely exceeds 15
metres in height
CONES:
- seed
cones: small, round, red at flowering,
turning brown as they age
- stay
closed on the tree
- pollen
cones: yellow
NEEDLES:
- 3
sided
- blue-green
and yellow in autumn
- grow
in clusters of 15 to 25
BARK:
- red-brown,
thin and scaly
WOOD
CHARACTERISTICS:
- Tamarack
Larch wood is heavy, durable
USES:
- modern
- pulp, posts, poles, fuel
- traditional
- roots: sewing bark onto canoes; resin:
relieve indigestion
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