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Cedar? Juniper?
Can anybody tell me what kind of trees these are. I don't know if they're Juniper or Cedar or something else.https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...e650654fa9.jpghttps://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...40568ae2bd.jpg
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Cedar and juniper are the same in Texas.
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Then how about this... are they good structure no matter which name it goes by?
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Absolutely! Last a really long time and once the needles fall off provide an outstanding structure. We use them at other times than Christmas. Christmas trees are very similar in structure.
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Great! My parents have 2 in their yard that they want gone. Each is about 15 ft wide and 18 or so tall. I think I will use them in my local private borrow pit. -The only cover in there is cattails all around and about 8-10 ft from bank. The depth is mostly in the 20 - 40 fow range. Should be a big boost for the fish.
Thank you for the help!
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We stuck them in 5 gallon buckets filled with sackcrete then zip tied a couple of empty gallon milk containers on top to keep them upright. They work great!
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Well, not that it matters but curiosity was killing me. It seems that the trees are actually known as a Northern White Cedar. Whew... now I can sleep tonite. rotfl
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We have used ALOT of Cedar in our lake, and it holds fish almost immediately....it really provides dense cover for all the food chain.
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Actually, with its foliage still in place it hosts an even greater variety of bio- diversity although it also is durable when the greenery is slowly consumed in a few years.