Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
salicaceae

Chamaecyparis thyoides var. henryae in habitat

salicaceae
11 years ago

Growing with longleaf pine (P. palustris) in the Florida panhandle.

From June 2007

Comments (5)

  • wisconsitom
    11 years ago

    Always amazed at how much some FL scenes look like places in N. WI. albeit. very different undergrowth!

    +oM

  • salicaceae
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    I know - sometimes I feel like I am back in Minnesota, until I see the saw palmettos or an armadillo. There is something about these areas that reminds me of the upper midwest though.

  • blue_yew
    11 years ago

    fantastic photo I have a chamaecyparis henryae here very
    rare in cultivation I like the bright green foliage very
    much.

  • pineresin
    11 years ago

    Nice!

    Taxonomically and ecologically, it is sufficiently distinct from typical White Cypress to deserve subspeciefic (rather than varietal) status, i.e. Chamaecyparis thyoides subsp. henryae. It was of course first described as a separate species (Chamaecyparis henryae), but isn't distinct enough for that.

    Resin

  • wisconsitom
    11 years ago

    Sal, I'd forgotten your MN background. You do indeed then know whereof I speak! Last time I was in FL, I was frequently struck by the similarities between these two widely separated regions.

    I'm going to be going to Fort Myers in a couple weeks. Any special recommendations for a worthy day trip to a natural area?

    +oM

0