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Chris Calohan II

Well-known member

cypress trees riverbank copy sml.jpg
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
These are a wonderful sight: an anchor to the ecology in Florida wetlands. They are bald Cypress trees!

Here are their characteristics:

  • Tall trunks flaring at the base (called buttressing)
  • “Knees”: woody projections rising from the roots around the trees
  • Trees standing directly in water for decades or centuries
  • Leafless branches because bald cypress are deciduous conifers (they lose needles in winter)

Trees yield wood resistant to rotting due to the oils embedded naturally!

Asher
 

Chris Calohan II

Well-known member
These are a wonderful sight: an anchor to the ecology in Florida wetlands. They are bald Cypress trees!

Here are their characteristics:

  • Tall trunks flaring at the base (called buttressing)
  • “Knees”: woody projections rising from the roots around the trees
  • Trees standing directly in water for decades or centuries
  • Leafless branches because bald cypress are deciduous conifers (they lose needles in winter)

Trees yield wood resistant to rotting due to the oils embedded naturally!

Asher
Yes, I literally have them growing outside my back door though not in the density seen in these two images. However, less than two miles from my back door are thousands of Bald Cypress. They are best photographed in the fall when the needles turn orange and red.
 
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