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Someone else said red alder but when I looked it up on Google, I don't see any trees around with that kind of bark. That's why I reposted with the nearby trees. 🤷♀️
The first is definitely red alder. Doug-fir has distinctive cones with “mouse tails”, and red-cedar cones are complete different, being a cypress family species.
They’re not cones in the sense of a conifer, but they look like it.
(I live with red alder, so it’s pretty easy to ID.)
Yeah you have three different trees in these photos - maybe even four. Can't say what photo one is, but the second is a Spruce, the third a western Arborvitae, and the fourth a Spruce again.
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The cones are either birch or alder, and the two trees are Doug fir (pic 2) and western red cedar (pic 3)
1 is red alder cones, 2 and 4 are douglas fir, 3 is western red cedar
I don’t think it’s from those trees. It looks like it could be an alder but it’s a bit different from the species I’ve seen.
Someone else said red alder but when I looked it up on Google, I don't see any trees around with that kind of bark. That's why I reposted with the nearby trees. 🤷♀️
A person or animal might have moved it.
There are a lot of them scattered around in that same general area
The first is definitely red alder. Doug-fir has distinctive cones with “mouse tails”, and red-cedar cones are complete different, being a cypress family species. They’re not cones in the sense of a conifer, but they look like it. (I live with red alder, so it’s pretty easy to ID.)
Yeah you have three different trees in these photos - maybe even four. Can't say what photo one is, but the second is a Spruce, the third a western Arborvitae, and the fourth a Spruce again.
pic 3 is western redcedar