8i8 The Trees of Great Britain and Ireland 



with Larix occidentalis, on the damper and shadier slopes of the mountains, at 4000 

 to 6000 feet, giving place to Pinus ponderosa in drier and sunnier situations, and never 

 attains, so far as I could see or learn, more than 140 to 150 feet m height. 



In Washington and British Columbia it is not seen in the dry country east of 

 the Cascade range, but appears as soon as the forest begins to thicken near the 

 watershed ; and on the western slopes of the mountains, from about 6000 feet down- 

 wards, is almost everywhere, except in swampy land, the dominant tree of the 

 forest, attaining 200 to 300 feet in height from sea level to about 2000 feet. 



It grows usually in mixture with Thuya plicata, Tsuga Albertiana, Puea 

 sitchensis, and Abies grandis ; sometimes with a smaller proportion of Pinus monticola, 

 and in drier situations mth Pinus ponderosa f but in all the coast forests which I saw 

 in Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, including Vancouver Island, it out- 

 numbers all the other conifers, except where forest fires have destroyed it, and its 

 place is being to some extent taken by the hemlock, whose seeds seem able to 

 germinate and grow in denser shade and in deeper humus than the young plants of 

 the Douglas fir can endure. Wherever the soil becomes too dry and rocky for 

 hemlock and Thuya, the Douglas fir is able to grow, climbing up to the dry ridges 

 and sunny slopes until it meets the more alpine species of conifers. Its habit and 

 size vary according to the soil and situation ; but I never observed any trees even in 

 the most open situations, whose branches extended so far from the trunk as they do 

 in English parks and gardens, and it does not attain anything like its full size unless 

 it has a deep soil, a sheltered situation, and has been drawn up in youth by the 

 struggle for existence, which prevails everywhere in the forest. 



I saw a section of bark in the Washington State exhibit at the St. Louis 

 Exhibition, taken from a tree cut at M'Cormick in Lewis Co., Washington, in the 

 spring of 1904 ; which was said by Mr. Baker, who was in charge of it, to have been 

 390 feet high. The same tree was recorded, however, in a Washington newspaper 

 as having been 340 feet high and 42 feet in circumference (probably at three to four 

 feet from the ground), and above 300 years old. The tree is said to have contained 

 79,218 feet board measure, equal to above 8000 cubic feet, quarter-girth measure. 

 The discrepancy in the account of the height and that given me by Mr. Baker may 

 arise, in part, from the tree in falling, having jumped some distance from its stump. 



Another tree even more remarkable, though not so large, was cut by Mr. 

 Angus M'Dougall of Tacoma for the Chicago Exhibition in 1893. This grew in 

 Snohomish Co., Washington, and measured on the stump only 4 feet in diameter. In 

 falling it broke off at a height of 238 feet, where it measured ij^ inches in diameter, 

 and was nearly free from branches to a height of 216 feet, which length was sent to 

 Chicago. 



The largest tree I have ever seen myself, which is said to be perhaps the largest 

 known in Vancouver Island, grows by the roadside at Mr. P. Barkley's farm at 

 Westholme, about 40 miles north of Victoria and 4 miles south of Chemainus Station. 



1 In the Bow river of Alberta it grows mixed with aspen (Populus tremuloides), and Cottonwood (/". balsamifera), — 

 Wilcox, The Rockies of Canada, p. 65. 



