Who is 'Araucaria Columnaris', Mr. Christmas Tree ?


Araucaria columnaris is among the most common species of Araucaria planted as an ornamental tree and street tree in warm temperate climates.
It is a distinctive narrowly conical tree growing up to 60 m (200 ft) tall in its native habit. The trees have a slender, spire-like crown.[3]
The bark of the Cook pine peels off in thin paper-like sheets or strips and is rough, grey, and resinous.[3]
The relatively short, mostly horizontal branches are in whorls around the slender, upright to slightly leaning trunk. The branches are lined with cord-like, horizontal branchlets. The branchlets are covered with small, green, incurved, point-tipped, spirally arranged, overlapping leaves. The young leaves are needle-like, while the broader adult leaves are triangular and scale-like.[3]
The female seed cones are scaly, egg-shaped, and 10–15 cm (4–6 in) long by 7–11 cm (3–4 in) wide. The smaller, more numerous male pollen cones are at the tips of the branchlets and are scaly, foxtail-shaped, and 5 cm (2 inches) long.[3]
The Cook pine can be confused with the Norfolk Island pine due to their similar appearances.
DID YOU KNOW ???
A 2017 study found that trees tend to have a uniform tilt dependent on the hemisphere of their location, leaning on average 8 degrees south in the northern hemisphere and the same angle north in the southern hemisphere.[4]
Unbelievable !!!
Watch this wonderful Christmas movie with your family.
A family made homeless through job loss, by an apparently insignificant gesture of kindness becomes, after a series of hardships and tough times, carer of a Christmas Tree Farm.
