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I went to lie down for a while between dinner and family game night last night and slept right through until morning. That’s the first time I’ve missed a drawing day since beginning the leaves on January 1. I’m particularly sorry to have missed out on Sushi-Go with the family.
So I’m back to it today, and wanted to draw the cone again, this time with charcoal pencils.
I haven’t been giving the dimensions on these because it’s just too tedious to measure every day, but they are almost all in the same 6 x 8.5 sketchbook. Some really fill the page, while some, like this drawing, are quite a bit smaller.
They are tight, ovoid cones in the trees, but when they fall to the ground they often look like tiny, wizened roses.

Maybe tomorrow I’ll depart from the leaf-a-day plan long enough to draw the cone of a deodar, because I love them. But tonight, the leaves.

Not a native. The names say it all: Atlas cedar, from the Atlas mountain range in Algeria and Morocco, and Cedrus atlanticus for the same reason. But it has been planted along the Pacific coast of the US. It is said that we have a Mediterranean climate, so maybe the Atlas cedars planted as ornamentals here feel at home.
The search for a good photo of subalpine larch needles led me to this article by Michael Kauffmann, an ecologist whose CV reveals a body of research on conifers of the western North American continent. These particular needles are so short that I thought I was looking at newly emerged leaves–baby needles–but Kauffmann says something else is going on: an extremely varied and subtle response to the needs, not just on any particular slope of foothills, but on a particular branch or twig of the tree. “At any given place on the tree, the subalpine larch allocates needles–how long or how many–to optimize the energy balance based on availability of resources.” He took this photo, and others on the same tree showing needles half the length of these, double their length, triple their length. Nature is amazing.


Wikipedia summarizes a few points this way: “With its thick bark, nonflammable foliage and protective cones, the species is very fire resistant. In the late 20th century, after wildfires had been suppressed for almost a century, larches at Seeley Lake and Glacier National Park were endangered by major fires enabled by fuel ladder; normally smaller fires would have depleted the fuel. In more recent years, many smaller fires have been allowed to take their course.”






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