Gift Certificates | Shop | Plant lists | Search | Hours
Home
> Nature of California
> Plant Communities
> Plant Communities of California
> Red Fir Forest

See also Habitats

California's Red Fir Forest

The Red Fir Forest is clean and open. In the sunny openings where the soil is thin, some would say, not there, Pinemat Manzanita (Arctostaphylos nevadensis) and Mahala Mat (Ceanothus prostratus) live with large areas of Mountain Pride (Penstemon newberryi). Slightly deeper soils can have Bush Chinquapin (Chrysolepis sempervirens) or Greenleaf Manzanita (Arctostaphylos patula).
Green leaf manzanitas are in the forefront with firs in the background. This is what a clear cut looks like as it tries to recover.

The soil never gets hot up where this forest is. The air has that 'mountain zing' most of the time. Frost free days may exist in July and August, sometimes in a warm year, September. Snow can be very deep here and the forest can form 100 foot tall thickets. Because the soils are so acidic, perfect draining, the snowfall commonly 10 feet or more(up to 60), and summers cool, plants from this community are a problem in much of the rest of California. Back east these plants can be winners, but this is a hard plant community for teachers to build for a school garden in Bakersfield, Los Angeles or San Diego. The best we can hope for in a lowland garden is something like this picture in a town like Cambria, Monterey or Santa Cruz.

Mountain Whitethorn (Ceanothus cordulatus) with fir and pine.

Red fir forest has little weeds but manzanitas, wildflowers, Mountain Mint (Monardella odoratissima), Mountain Whitethorn (Ceanothus cordulatus), and trees everywhere. Some common trees are guess what? Red Fir (Abies magnifica), Jeffrey Pine (Pinus jeffreyi), and Lodgepole Pine (Pinus contorta ssp. murrayana).

Granitic soils are usually acidic and fast draining. Think fir and pine trees with shed- sized boulders between them. You commonly walk through rock outcroppings or almost beach gravel between groves.

Makes you want to ride a horse amongst the fir trees and look for gold or silver doesn't it? Maybe build a log cabin and have a television show called 'Big Trees and Rocks'.

The only problem with this picture is that it was taken in summer, the 2-3 months that represent the spring, summer, and fall of this plant community. Come September things get a little iffy. Frost is common by the first of October, 3-8 foot of snow can happen anytime in October or early November. The snow stays in this community until May or so. Peattie called this forest the “snow“ forest because of the extra moisture derived from the slow snow melt. Plants that live in and under this snow have adapted by hibernating in winter and our spring. This plant community's spring is in July and August. The temperature under the snow is commonly just above freezing, 1 C or 33 F. (Gophers eat all they can find.) The shrubs and perennials from here do great in areas of cool weather. They do not handle hard winter frosts, nor hot spring soils, or hot summer temperatures.

Plants

A list of California native plants that grow in the Red Fir Forest plant community.

Red fir up in the Lower Sierras at about 7500 feet. - grid24_12
an old photo of a Red fir forest. - grid24_12
an old photo of a Red Fir forest. - grid24_12
 Mountain Pride, Penstemon newberryi plant, in flower at 7500 ft. - grid24_12
Arctostaphylos patula, Greenleaf Manzanita at a higher elevation in the Sierras. When the get 3-5 meters of snow on them they lay low. - grid24_12
Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.
A short video of a Red fir forest with Abies magnifica, the Red Fir or Silvertip fir, and Abies concolor, White Fir.
Instagram Logo
Facebook Logo
Help Buying plants online
Santa Margarita Inventory Santa Margarita nursery About laspilitas.com

Do you like what we're doing with the pages?
Email SHORT questions or suggestions

We tried to use kibble for the webmaster, he still can't type. He does bark the answers.
Copyright © 1992-2025 Las Pilitas Nursery
Edited on Aug 07, 2013. Authors: Bert Wilson
Site Index