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Balsam Fir (Abies Balsamea Cooks Blue) 5 seeds

Balsam Fir (Abies Balsamea Cooks Blue) 5 seeds
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GERMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
We always include printed germination instructions.

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Seed collected from grafted blue needled balsam plantation. The blue color is from the wax on the needles.
Balsam fir is a tall coniferous evergreen tree. It has a fine pyramidal form and becomes a very tall tree when mature. Its small blue-green needles are soft, glossy and smell of sweet balsam. The female cones are full of resin and are brown when mature, and shatter readily when dry.
This tree offers year round interest and provides habitat to wildlife, including foliage eaten by deer.
Plants excel in full to part sun and do well in slightly acidic, well-drained soils that are moist.
High nitrogen levels help keep the blue color in the needles.
This evergreen does not fair well in regions that are hot-summered or affected by drying winds or seasonal droughts. Balsam fir is a favorite Christmas tree. Use it in the landscape as specimen trees, very tall privacy screens, dense windbreaks or for reforestation.
Information source: Learn2grow.com.

Genus - Abies
Species - Balsamea
Common name - Balsam Fir
Pre-Treatment - Required
Hardiness zones - 3 - 6
Height - 45'-75' / 14 - 22 m
Spread - 10'-20' / 3 - 6 m
Plant type - Medium-large Tree
Vegetation type - Evergreen
Exposure - Full Sun, Partial Sun, Partial Shade
Growth rate - Slow
Soil PH - Acid, neutral
Soil type - Lam, sand, well drained
Water requirements - Average, drought tolerant
Leaf / Flower color - Blue - Green / --

Useful Info
GerminationAbies seeds need to be "overwintered" or stratified before they will germinate.
1. Soak overnight in warm water.
2. Then pre-chill (stratify) for 30 days. Seeds can be stratified in dampened peat, sand or moist vermiculite , in a plastic box or bag at +4C in a refrigerator. The seeds should not be frozen or in a wet medium.
Seed can be sown in early February in a greenhouse or outdoors in March. Normally will only germinate with light, but the stratification (described above) can help to increase the germination rate.
Sow Abies seeds 2-4 mm deep in the seed sowing mix.
Abies seeds will usually germinate in 21-40 days if overwintered and stratified or about 6 - 8 weeks if sown directly.