The Lawson Cypress (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana), also known as the Port Orford Cedar, is an evergreen coniferous tree that can live for hundreds of years. The Lawson Cypress is native to both Oregon and northwestern California in the United States, found in valleys and along streams. The foliage of the Lawson Cypress grows in flat sprays giving the tree a feathery appearance and its trunk has a red-brown bark coloring. The leaves of the Lawson Cypress are narrow, scale-like, and produce a pungent scent. The Lawson Cypress produces cones and is non-flowering. The Lawson Cypress is considered to be near threatened to extinction.
Lawson Cypresses have a typical overall height between 40’-60’ (12.2-18.3 m) and spread diameter of 10’-18’ (3-5.5 m). Exceptional mature Lawson Cypress trees may grow to heights of 175’ (53 m) in the wild. The trunk of the Lawson Cypress has a diameter of 4’-9’ (1.2-2.7 m) with scale-like leaf lengths between .12”-.2” (3-5 mm).
The Lawson Cypress (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana), also known as the Port Orford Cedar, is an evergreen coniferous tree that can live for hundreds of years. The Lawson Cypress is native to both Oregon and northwestern California in the United States, found in valleys and along streams. The foliage of the Lawson Cypress grows in flat sprays giving the tree a feathery appearance and its trunk has a red-brown bark coloring. The leaves of the Lawson Cypress are narrow, scale-like, and produce a pungent scent. The Lawson Cypress produces cones and is non-flowering. The Lawson Cypress is considered to be near threatened to extinction.
Lawson Cypresses have a typical overall height between 40’-60’ (12.2-18.3 m) and spread diameter of 10’-18’ (3-5.5 m). Exceptional mature Lawson Cypress trees may grow to heights of 175’ (53 m) in the wild. The trunk of the Lawson Cypress has a diameter of 4’-9’ (1.2-2.7 m) with scale-like leaf lengths between .12”-.2” (3-5 mm).