News

Another common name of Juniperus ashei (Ashe's juniper) is Mountain Cedar. According to this article from Conifer Reproductive Biology Cedar Fever: Juniperus Ashei Pollen on the rise: ...
No, it isn't true—Juniperus ashei (Ashe juniper)is native to the Texas Hill Country. What is the evidence that supports this? It was certainly abundant in the Hill Country 165 years ago when ...
Mountain cedar, or Juniperus ashei, is a tree species that may cause an allergic reaction in some people who inhale its pollen. Learn more here.
In the latter years of the 19th century, an ashe juniper sprouted in a thicket near the Camino Real, the King’s Highway, just north of San Antonio, Texas. Ashe juniper, juniperus ashei, normally grows ...
Essential oils don’t just smell nice, they offer several benefits for your skin, hair and overall health. One of the best oils is cedarwood essential oil, which is made from different parts of cedar ...
Ashe juniper, also known as Juniperus ashei, is the dominant native tree species in the Texas Hill Country. It's found in central Texas, the Edwards Plateau, the Central Mineral Region, ...
They even ate several of my Juniperus ashei (Ashe juniper). The only things not protected that they didn't eat were agarita, Texas persimmon, beautybush, wax myrtle and desert willow.
The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department states that the Edwards Plateau is covered with about 24 million acres of these trees, scientifically known as Juniperus ashei.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, the Juniperus ashei, more commonly known as mountain cedar, is found in over 8.6 million acres in Texas, ...
What reportedly began years ago with one local family embellishing a single Texas cedar in the dark of night has spread not unlike the invasive Juniperus ashei themselves—that is, rapidly and ...
The plant we know as “mountain cedar” is actually ashe juniper (juniperus ashei). Around Texas, ashe juniper trees mainly grow in the Hill Country, with male trees pollinating late in the year.
Welcome to cedar fever season, the time of the year when pollen from mountain cedar or Ashe juniper trees, scientifically known as Juniperus ashei, invades our sinuses and trigger allergic reactions.