Sun Exposure: Part sun to shade
Origin: Eurasia, from Great Britain to Caucasus, Iran, south to North Africa
Growth Habits: Slow-growing evergreen shrub or tree, 20 to 45 feet tall (6-14 m), 20 feet spread (6 m), or more in favorable sites, it is also largely trimmed to make hedges, and then stays pretty much to the size required; droopy horizontal branchlets; reddish purple, scaly bark; shiny dark green, linear, spirally arranged leaves, 1 inch long (2.5 cm), yellowish green undersides
Watering Needs: Little water once established
Propagation: Branch tip cuttings in the fall, layering, seeds (need cold stratification)
Propagation: Cutting or occasionally seed
Most part of the yew are poisonous and should be considered potentially deadly. Parts of the fruit are supposed edible if the seeds are not ingested.
Yew wood was used to make long bow, and Robin Hood used a yew bow in his adventures. Yew has a long connection with druidic beliefs.
Since the yews can be propagated relatively easily by cuttings, there is a number of selected cultivars, several of them probably belonging to related species, rather than to T. baccata :
Blooming Habits:
Inconspicuous flowers in early spring.
Fruiting Habits:
Dioecious. The female trees carry red, fleshy, ovoid, fruits, about 0.4 inch long (1 cm) maturing in mid summer (August)
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