Thuja occidentalis (Eastern White Cedar) Seeds

Zones: 2 to 7.

Native to northeastern North America.

Thuja occidentalis, commonly known as American arborvitae, Eastern arborvitae, Eastern white cedar or Northern white cedar, is a dense, conical to narrow-pyramidal (sometimes maturing to broad-pyramidal) evergreen tree that is native to northeastern North America.

Many cultivated varieties are sold in nurseries and garden centres, from compact and dwarf varieties suited for foundation plantings to dense, upright cultivars for lawn specimen trees or for hedging. It is one of the most popular trees in yards and parks. It is also very suitable as a bonsai specimen. Leaves are scale-like, aromatic, yellow-green to green. Bark is a reddish-brown and can peel on mature trunks. The dense branching and evergreen foliage make it very attractive to birds for nesting. It prefers full sun or partial shade and moist, well-drained soil.

Newly transplanted trees may require burlap protection in the winter to prevent winter burn of foliage, but once established, the northern white cedar is very cold hardy and resilient and can be a very long lived tree.

Size: Height 20 to 40 ft; Width 10 to 15 ft.

Growing Info, follow in order:
Scarification: Soak in water, let stand in water for 24 hours.
Stratification: cold stratify for 60 days.
Germination: sow seed 1/8" deep , tamp the soil, keep moist, mulch the seed bed, cover seedbed with some shade, requires light for germination.