Author Topic: how to identifiy "YEW"  (Read 3179 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline thomas h

  • Member
  • Posts: 394
how to identifiy "YEW"
« on: April 26, 2013, 12:33:08 pm »
here are a few simple guides to the  identification of the  yew tree---

Examine a branch. Notice the length and color of the needles. Yews are evergreen plants with needles instead of leaves. If the plant you're looking at has leaves, it is not a yew. Yew needles are shorter than pine needles, ranging from less than an inch long to about an inch and a quarter. They are flat, and usually are darker green on the top than on the bottom in the common (or English) (Taxus baccata) and Japanese yew (T. cuspidata), and grayish green in the Pacific yew (T. brevifolia).
The yew's needles lie on either side of the stem, but they grow in a spiral from one end of the branch to the other.


Estimate the height of the plant. If the plant is short and shrubby, although it is full grown, it may be a Canadian yew (T. canadensis). The Canadian species reach a maximum height of five feet.

Other yew species grow much taller, more than 10 feet in height. Mature common yews stand 30 to 50 feet tall and may be 20 feet wide, although short, shrub-like individuals are found.Older specimens may exhibit a unique structure in which the branches have grown downward, rooted into the ground, and become, essentially, another plant. This quality contributed to the yew's reputation as the ever-living tree among ancient cultures.

Japanese yews stand between 10 and 40 feet in height and may be as wide as they are tall. Pacific yews can grow to heights of 40 feet. Florida yews (T. floridana) stand between 20 and 30 feet.


Examine the bark. The bark of the yew is reddish-brown, tending toward purple in the Florida yew. Japanese yews have scaly bark, while common yews have furrowed, flaky bark.


Study the flowers, catkins and berries if possible. Male yews form small catkins in early spring, which give off pollen that fertilize the flowers on the female plants. Yellow flowers indicate that the female plant is either a common, Japanese, or Canadian yew.

In September, most female yews bear round, red berries, although Pacific yews produce brown berries. Each berry has an indentation on the flower end of the berry. Inside the berry is a single, poisonous seed.


Determine your location if you want to identify the species of yew. This will be helpful for some North American species; however, common and Japanese yews have been imported to the United States.

The common yew is native to Europe, where it can be found from Great Britain to Northern Africa. The Japanese yew is native to Japan, China and Korea. Both these species have been imported to the United States for use in gardens and landscaping. The Japanese yew is considered an invasive species in the United States and can be found in young forests and woodlots from Massachusetts to Kentucky.

The Pacific yew is native to Alaska, western Canada and several western states. The Canadian yew is native to Canada, from Manitoba eastward, and the United States from Minnesota and Iowa to the eastern seaboard south to North Carolina.
The rare Florida yew is found only along the Appalachicola River in the Florida panhandle.



Offline Carson (CMB)

  • Member
  • Posts: 2,319
Re: how to identifiy "YEW"
« Reply #1 on: April 30, 2013, 12:03:59 am »
Interesting.  I had never even heard of the florida or canada yew.    BTW, the pacific yew berries are red rather than brown. 
"The bow is the old first lyre,
the mono chord, the initial rune of fine art
The humanities grew out from archery as a flower from a seed
No sooner did the soft, sweet note of the bow-string charm the ear of genius than music was born, and from music came poetry and painting and..." Maurice Thompso

Offline Ringeck85

  • Member
  • Posts: 139
Re: how to identifiy "YEW"
« Reply #2 on: May 12, 2013, 01:07:47 am »
I saw some florida torreya at Torreya state park, which is a tree closely related to yew trees and grows in the same area as Florida Yew. There are only about 200 of the torreya trees in the park, and that's the only place they naturally grow, along the Apalachicola river. Beautiful place :) fun for camping for a few bucks, though the woods are very spooky and quiet at night for a forest.
"It is how we choose what we do, and how we approach it, that determines whether the sum of our days adds up to a formless blur, or to something resembling a work of art."
-Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

(Ren', in Wytheville, VA)

Offline mullet

  • Global Moderator
  • Member
  • Posts: 22,909
  • Eddie Parker
Re: how to identifiy "YEW"
« Reply #3 on: May 12, 2013, 01:50:15 am »
I've seen the Yew in the park also and the area sure seems like some very, old woods. It is a ral nice place.

I saw some florida torreya at Torreya state park, which is a tree closely related to yew trees and grows in the same area as Florida Yew. There are only about 200 of the torreya trees in the park, and that's the only place they naturally grow, along the Apalachicola river. Beautiful place :) fun for camping for a few bucks, though the woods are very spooky and quiet at night for a forest.
Lakeland, Florida
 If you have to pull the trigger, is it really archery?

Offline AH

  • Member
  • Posts: 244
Re: how to identifiy "YEW"
« Reply #4 on: May 29, 2013, 02:31:48 am »
only now do I realize...
there are three large yews on my middle school campus!! ;D

Offline hatcha

  • Member
  • Posts: 246
Re: how to identifiy "YEW"
« Reply #5 on: May 29, 2013, 10:11:03 am »
Spent a few days up in Belfast last week, for my li'l sister's wedding to a local man there.  After the ceremony, we went to a park and I found a whole load of hedging that's yew (probably taxus baccata - isn't that the hedgey yew?).  Anyway, I didn't bring my axe in the car for the trip and, as I was an usher at the wedding, I didn't have my Cold Steel Recon 1 knife on my pocket either... :-[ :'(

I did see quite a lot of nice, long, straight pieces of yew, just waiting to be "thinned out"...  I'll have to take another trip up there some time in the future...  >:D ;D ;)