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In general, the Japanese cedar lives for about 500 years, but yakusugi trees live much longer.
There is hope for a 10-foot-tall Japanese cedar they had pruned to a lollipop.
Oak is considered the best, followed in order by holly, cherry, sakaki and Japanese cedar.
In Neba there is a very old Japanese cedar.
Built in 1998, the tower represents the Sanbu Japanese cedar tree.
An upstairs passageway is walled with Japanese cedar bark.
It was found during a study of Japanese cedar trees, with the year of occurrence determined through dendrochronology.
The mansion consisted of a main building with two large roofs, constructed of Japanese Cedar.
An ancient Japanese cedar tree (Cryptomeria) can be found on shrine compound, and is considered sacred.
"small Japanese cedar" or コスギ in katakana) is a Japanese surname.
In the exhibit, a whole stand of it sets off two big shaggy Japanese cedars, whose dark green needles turn a mahogany red in winter.
Stands of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) have replaced native vegetation and now provide shelter.
Isonokami shrine is surrounded by Japanese cedar (sugi), and is known for its quiet solemnity.
A nuthatch pair search the smooth trunk of the beech tree outside my window on the small pond, then move to a more promising Japanese cedar.
The drought has killed several conifers, she said, including a valuable Japanese cedar, and has damaged some cherry and apple trees.
The hill range also has noted forests of oaks, chestnut, Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria), and various species of evergreen.
Among the Nyakutakuji Temple Ruins, there is a Japanese cedar called Shinobu-suji.
Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica)
The wood used is Cryptomeria (杉, sugi), which is also inaccurately known as Japanese cedar.
Freshly cooked rice is pounded until somewhat mashed, then formed into cylinders around Japanese cedar skewers, and toasted over an open hearth.
Late one afternoon, his wife, Namiko, 72, stood in front of their house, her eyes fixed on a grove of Japanese cedars a stone's throw away.
The tree is often called Japanese cedar in English, though the tree is not related to the true cedars (Cedrus).
Cryptomeria, the Japanese cedar, is a conifer extensively grown for its timber; many seedlings can be found in the last remnants of medium-altitude native vegetation.
Originally, tall Japanese cedars formed the irregular, dark green screen that separated one viewing area from another, tempting visitors to see what lay on the other side.
Two species of oak are found on the upper parts of the river and Japanese cedar on the middle and lower parts of the river.