In Marysville, it is illegal to plant any tree in the pine or yew families directly adjacent to a public street or where it may overhang a public street.
Cypress Family
California Juniper
California juniper is a 9- to 15-foot-tall shrub or small tree that is native to Sutter County and typically grows at elevations below 5,000 feet. It is most often found on slopes in central oak woodland. It attracts
bushtits. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: California Juniper
Flickr: California Juniper
Picasa: California Juniper
MacNab's Cypress
MacNab's cypress is a 9- to 36-foot-tall shrub or small tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations between 1,000 and 2,500 feet. It is most often found on slopes in central oak woodland. It tolerates
serpentine. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: MacNab's Cypress
Flickr: MacNab's Cypress
Picasa: MacNab's Cypress
Incense Cedar
Incense cedar (also called bastard cedar) is a 12- to 150-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations between 2,500 and 8,000 feet. It is most often found on slopes and in canyons in yellow pine forest. It tolerates partial shade and
serpentine. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Incense Cedar
Flickr: Incense Cedar
Picasa: Incense Cedar
Pine Family
Gray Pine
Gray pine (Pinus sabiniana) in Hammon Grove Park. Photo by queerbychoice.
Gray Pine (also called foothill pine) is a 20- to 80-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations below 4,500 feet. It is most often found on slopes in central oak woodland. It prefers full sun. It attracts
Nuttall's woodpeckers. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Gray Pine
Flickr: Gray Pine
Picasa: Gray Pine
Gray pine (Pinus sabiniana) in the
California State University Sacramento arboretum. Photo by queerbychoice.
Donna M. Landerman's column "A Drug Store in the Maidu's Back Yard," printed in the Territorial Dispatch on November 11, 2009, explains some of the many uses of gray pines:
| Foothill pine, To'-nim chahm. Along with the oaks, this graceful pine defines our landscape. It is more round-topped and open-branched than most pines; you can see right through them. The foliage has a grayish cast, the needles long (as long as 15 inches), in bunches of three. |
| While a beautiful tree, it is not highly valued by people today. But Nisenan, as well as early [white] settlers, found it a very useful tree. The nuts of its gigantic cones—some almost one foot long and six inches in diameter, weighing as much as four pounds—were laboriously collected. This was a sticky job. The pitchy, green cones were knocked rom the tree and held over a fire until their scales opened, releasing the hard coated seeds. These were then cracked open to remove the tasty kernels within. But it was worth it, for the seeds are over 51% at and 28% protein—power-packed food. High fat foods were rare in the Nisenan diet, and therefore prized. |
|
The pitch itself was a useful glue and could be used to make torches for night travel. White settlers are also known to have used it as a kind of band aid coating over sores and burns. Some even chewed the pitch when it thickened into a gum as a cure for rheumatism or as a kind of chewing gum. (I tried it myself when I was a young girl living in the foothills below |
Balsam Fir
Balsam fir (also called white fir or silver fir) is a 20- to 180-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations below 10,000 feet. It is found in yellow pine forest. It tolerates full shade. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Balsam Fir
Flickr: Balsam Fir
Picasa: Balsam Fir
Sugar Pine
Sugar pine (Pinus lambertiana) in the
California State University Sacramento arboretum. Photo by queerbychoice.
Sugar Pine is a 40- to 230-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations below 9,000 feet. It is most often found on slopes in yellow pine forest. It tolerates partial shade. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Sugar Pine
Flickr: Sugar Pine
Picasa: Sugar Pine
Douglas-Fir
Douglas-fir is a 40- to 200-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations below 5,000 feet. It is found in yellow pine forest. It tolerates partial shade. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Douglas-Fir
Flickr: Douglas-Fir
Picasa: Douglas-Fir
Yellow Pine
Yellow pine (Pinus ponderosa). Photo by queerbychoice.
Yellow pine (also called ponderosa pine, pitch pine, or silver pine) is a 40- to 225-foot-tall tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations between 3,000 and 7,500 feet. It is found in yellow pine forest. It prefers full sun. You can read more about it at the
Las Pilitas Nursery website and
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics, and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Yellow Pine
Flickr: Yellow Pine
Picasa: Yellow Pine
Yew Family
Pacific Yew
Pacific yew (also called Western yew or California yew) is an 8- to 40-foot-tall shrub or small tree that is native to Yuba County and typically grows at elevations below 7,000 feet. It is found in yellow pine forest. It tolerates full shade. You can read more about it at
USDA Conservation Plant Characteristics and find out where to buy it at the
California Native Plant Link Exchange.
CalPhotos: Pacific Yew
Flickr: Pacific Yew
Picasa: Pacific Yew


