The high elevations, especially in mountain regions and water canyons in western North America is the correct place to find the Engelmann Spruce (Picea engelmannii). Other people call it white spruce, mountain spruce, or silver spruce. Wood from this tree is useful for making paper, construction materials, and musical instruments like pianos. This evergreen coniferous tree can be large or medium-size, with a thin, scaly reddish bark, buff-brown or orange-brown shoots, and blue-green needle-like leaves. Older trees have cylindrical crowns and young trees have narrow conic crowns. It produces pendulous, slender, cylindrical seed cones holding black seeds.
Engelmann Spruces have a typical overall height between 82’-131’ (25-40 m) and spread diameter of 10’-20' (3-6.1 m). Exceptional mature Engelmann Spruce trees may grow to a height of 130’ (40 m) in the wild. The trunk of the Engelmann Spruce has a diameter of 30”-59” (75-150 cm) with needle-like leaf lengths between .59”-1.18” (15-30 mm).
The high elevations, especially in mountain regions and water canyons in western North America is the correct place to find the Engelmann Spruce (Picea engelmannii). Other people call it white spruce, mountain spruce, or silver spruce. Wood from this tree is useful for making paper, construction materials, and musical instruments like pianos. This evergreen coniferous tree can be large or medium-size, with a thin, scaly reddish bark, buff-brown or orange-brown shoots, and blue-green needle-like leaves. Older trees have cylindrical crowns and young trees have narrow conic crowns. It produces pendulous, slender, cylindrical seed cones holding black seeds.
Engelmann Spruces have a typical overall height between 82’-131’ (25-40 m) and spread diameter of 10’-20' (3-6.1 m). Exceptional mature Engelmann Spruce trees may grow to a height of 130’ (40 m) in the wild. The trunk of the Engelmann Spruce has a diameter of 30”-59” (75-150 cm) with needle-like leaf lengths between .59”-1.18” (15-30 mm).