300 years, and it is a perennial plant!
Common trees include Subalpine Fir, Subalpine Larch, Engelmann Spruce, Limber Pine, and Lodgepole Pine
Katherine Lynn Taylor has written: 'Woody fuel structure and fire in subalpine fir forests, Olympic National Park, Washington' -- subject(s): Forest fires, Fir, Research
Subalpine Republic was created in 1802.
The vegetation that is found in the subarctic is few and far between. The vegetation that does exist there includes the Subalpine fir tree, paper birch tree, black and white spruce trees, and quakening aspen trees.
Bottom to top; Riparian, Semi-desert shrubland, Pinyon-juniper woodland, Ponderosa pine forest, Mixed conifer forest, Spruce-fir forest, Subalpine forest, and Alpine tundra.
shut up about this
Ponderosa pine, whitebark pine, red oak, white oak, sugar maple, white pine, blue spruce, Englemann spruce, birch, quaking aspen, green ash, cottonwood, sequoia, Norway spruce, weeping willow, ash, elm, alpine larch, subalpine fir, locust, etc, etc.
If you mean "fir" as in "fir tree" it is pronounced like the word "fur"
No, Fir is a softwood.
nothing police will do after fir
it is fir
I will plant a fir tree