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This tree is growing in a garden in Johannesburg, South Africa. I'm pretty sure it's evergreen (turns out it's not). I'm not sure whether or not it is indigenous to this area.

Click on pictures for full size.

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UPDATE:

I had the opportunity to visit this tree in Winter for the first time last week. It is not evergreen, after all. Unfortunately, this means that it is not a Redwood (right?).

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Another update: The tree has produced cones this summer!

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Richard C
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  • Bark looks wrong, but someone slipped a young redwood in on you? https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://blog.oregonlive.com/terryrichard/2007/08/large_TR.RedwoodBranch.JPG&imgrefurl=http://blog.oregonlive.com/terryrichard/2007/08/these_californians_have_been_i.html&h=301&w=453&tbnid=j4-Uwx1z2r7dgM:&docid=CH-WCQMNYyX_XM&ei=qnPhVqH0PMPQ-QHIvJnIAw&tbm=isch&ved=0ahUKEwih8c_5mbbLAhVDaD4KHUheBjkQMwhiKDowOg – Wayfaring Stranger Mar 10 '16 at 13:20
  • That is probably the last tree I would think to find here. But, I don't see any reason why your answer is incorrect. The needles look right, and the tree might be too young to produce cones. I was not aware that these trees could even survive in our climate. Even looking at images of young redwoods' bark, I'm not able to rule this out. It does seem to have the correct "puff pastry" look to it. – Richard C Mar 10 '16 at 18:59
  • Tamaracks are deciduous, and that fruit/young cone looks familiar. Larix laricina: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larix_laricina Also called by a number of names including larch. – Wayfaring Stranger Feb 01 '17 at 23:10
  • The leaves and cones of larch are completely different from this tree. Thanks for the suggestion, though. – Richard C Feb 13 '17 at 14:09

5 Answers5

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I believe it is a Dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides) This tree looks and feels like a sequoia (and even terrestrial examples of bald cypress), but is not evergreen. Foliage turns red/brown before it drops it's leaves.

More info here and here.

[Metasequoia Leaves

That Idiot
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There are two trees that look very similar, on is the dawn redwood and the other is the bald cypress, both trees are deciduous conifers. the main difference is the growth habit is slightly different, here is a video with more info... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIlu0I3Pulw

in short, yours has alternate needles and branches (it looks like to me) and slightly less rounded cones, I think you have a Bald Cypress.

Grady Player
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It looks like a redwood tree to me: right foliage, right bark, right habit.

rivimey
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  • Thanks for the answer. As I stated in a previous comment, it does seem to fit the profile of a Redwood. I'm just not sure about the cones. I don't know how old this tree is, so I don't know if it's old enough for its reproductive mechanisms to display. – Richard C Jul 11 '16 at 13:47
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    @RichieACC, Redwood produces seed late: Wikipedia says "Coast redwood reproduces both sexually by seed and asexually by sprouting of buds, layering, or lignotubers. Seed production begins at 10–15 years of age ... ". I would guesstimate your tree is younger than that, though not by much. – rivimey Jul 12 '16 at 14:32
  • Turns out it's not evergreen, disqualifying Redwood as an option. – Richard C Aug 15 '16 at 16:22
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I'm not familiar enough with South Africa's trees to be firm on it, but it looks like a Yew or Redwood to me.

Paul Nardini
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  • Thanks for the answer. Like I said, I'm not sure that it is a South African tree. I'm not familiar with Yew or Redwoods. Looking at pictures though, it does not seem to fit with Yew. Yew seems to be wider at the base of the foliage than this tree. Also, I've never seen any fruit or flowers on this tree, and I've been seeing it for a few seasons. I don't know if it's just too young for that yet. – Richard C Jul 11 '16 at 13:46
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It looks exactly like the redwoods we have growing here in our area of California.

Gramma Sue
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