Most abundant on calcareous and somewhat alkaline soils.
Rocky mountain juniper wood.
Juniperus scopulorm or rocky mountain juniper is native to the rocky mountains and the northwestern great plains.
Slow growing rot resistant and pleasantly fragrant junipers twisted wood is used for everything from fence posts to firewood.
The common juniper s needles are not scale like unlike the leaves of a mature rocky mountain juniper.
W elcome to rocky mountain rustic your source for the cedar fence post ducks and fish.
As its name implies rocky mountain juniper is a common evergreen throughout the rocky mountains extending into the pine ridge and wildcat hills of the nebraska panhandle.
The fruits and young branches contain aromatic oil that is used in medicines.
The bluish black seed cones are similar but lack the waxy whitish bloom of rocky mountain juniper berries and attach directly without stalks to branches in the joints of leaves.
The seed cones of the common juniper are sold as juniper berries.
Juniper oil is distilled from the wood twigs and leaves.
All junipers produce small seed cones that resemble berries.
Where and when to see at bryce.
The essential oil contains cedrol which has toxic and possibly carcinogenic properties.
The close grained aromatic and durable wood of junipers is used for furniture interior paneling novelties and fence posts.
A mature height of 20 to 30 feet and spread 8 to 12 feet is typical with a slow growth rate of 1 foot per year.
Rocky mountain juniper is a dry or more rarely moist subhumid plant which grows well on open exposed bluffs rocky points or ridgetops on southern exposures and in ravines or canyons.
The cones are used to flavor gin.
These creations began their journey over a hundred years ago as juniper fence posts planted in the ranches and fields across the early american west.
The most common juniper in western north america is the rocky mountain juniper.
Juniper berries are a key ingredient in the production of gin.
It is found between 5 000 and 9 000 feet elevation.
Rocky mountain juniper is often confused with eastern redcedar.
Blue creeper juniper juniperus scopulorum monam a patented atypical rocky mountain juniper with a low 1 to 2 feet spreading growth habit.
Rm juniper is widely used in shelterbelts wildlife plantings and landscape plantings in the western great plains.