General: Native to Utah, the Rocky Mountains and Intermountain states. Slow growing. Likes moisture and good soil; may not do well with extreme heat or hot, dry winds. Wind-throw can be a problem. Intermediate shade tolerance.

Landscape Use: Beautiful, slow-growing tree but allow enough room – can eventually get quite tall and wide. Best if it is allowed to keep branches and foliage right to the ground. Will as often be green as blue in nature, but blue-foliage cultivars are available. Good visual, sound, and wind screen. Cooley spruce gall adelgid can cause unsightly brown galls to form on twig tips on blue spruces in the landscape. This is a very good tree, but it is over-used in many areas. In the recent past many planted trees have died from spruce ips beetle attack, made worse by chronic under-watering. Zones 2-7.

Leaves

Needles borne singly; about 1" long; evergreen; blue-white to dark green; 4-angled; sharp pointed; extend at right angles all around twig; very fragrant when crushed.

Pinaceae – Pine

Flowers/fruit: Monoecious. Fruit a papery cone that hangs down; about 2-1/2" to 4" long; light chestnut-brown; papery scales are slightly round-toothed at tip.

Bark: Light to dark gray; made-up of thin scales; wide, thick ridges on older trees.

Wood: Minor importance; similar to Engelmann spruce.

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