White cedar (Thuja occidentalis - sp? because thats from memory and not spell checked) grows well a lot of places far from the natural range. They are also known as “arbor vitae” because of an early European colonists who were dying of scurvy and the Indian folk told them they would be cured if they drank cedar tea. Worked so well, they started calling it “tree of life” or arbor vitae.
Up north they are important for winter deer cover and browse, but other places, south of the tiaga ecosystem deer are not very interested in them presumably because there is better browse available, and winters are not so harsh that the thermal cover becomes important. I am currently down in the southwest tip of Indiana for the eclipse that is happening tomorrow, and I saw a row of them looking very healthy today at an abandoned homestead, not even a mile from a cypress stand. I see it thriving all over the upper midwest, and suspect it will do well most places when planted. Interestingly white cedar is a cypress family plant (Thuja), but they don’t grow naturally very far south of the tiaga biome except in isolated locations that are mostly low wet soil spots.
They provide a number of resources like bark that makes nice baskets and makes a great waterproof roofing/siding for homes, very straight splitting strong lightweight wood, the wood also makes a fantastic friction fire base board (one of my favorite combinations is white cedar base and mullein flower stalk spindle for hand drill fires), and the tea as I alluded to earlier contains vitamin C. And those just a few of the many resources provided by this tree.
There is a lot more to know about white cedar, but I dont want to write a book here…
Last edited by loosanarrow; 04/08/24 02:45 AM.