"Doug Fir" Answers All Your Christmas Tree Questions

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November 12, 2013
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"Doug Fir" Answers All Your Christmas Tree Questions

Millersville University Professor/Student Release Droid App

MILLERSVILLE, Pa., Nov. 12, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In search of the perfect Christmas tree for your family?  What's the Cadillac of Christmas trees?  If you want a soft-needled tree, do you have to sacrifice fragrance?  And what is a Concolor?  You can get the answers thanks to the new "Doug Fir Christmas Tree Guide" app - available for free for your Android phone.

"There isn't another app like this," said Dr. Christopher Hardy, a biology professor at Millersville University of Pennsylvania.  "I designed this systematic guide to answer the questions I had about Christmas trees.  Doug Fir will help people identify trees and learn a bit about them at the same time - all from the ease of their phone."

Hardy designed this app with Millersville computer science student, Joe Marks, who graduated in May.

"The top 10 trees we cover make up 99% of all Christmas trees sold," said Hardy.  These include: Concolor (White Fir), Fraser Fir, Douglas Fir, Scotch Pine, White Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce, Norway Spruce, Arizona Cypress (Ice-cedar), Leyland Cypress and Red-Cedar.

"A Blue Spruce may look impressive in a great room," said Hardy, "but its sharp needles can draw blood and wouldn't be great in close quarters with kids.  A Concolor (White Fir) is an up-and-coming tree that is both soft and very fragrant.  It has the blue-silvery look of the spruce without the spruce's prickly needles."

Some fun facts from the Doug Fir app:

    --  The White fir is the natural host to the "fir mistletoe," which is a
        parasitic plant.
    --  The pines - Scotch and White - while soft, are not as fragrant as the
        firs.
    --  The conical shape of Christmas trees is an adaptation to shed snow and
        ice in the winter.
    --  The wonderfully scented resin of Christmas trees is also the source of
        the industrial solvent turpentine and the rosin used to create friction
        on bows for string instruments, and improve the grip of gymnasts,
        bowlers and baseball pitchers.
    --  The sticky resin protects the trees from insect and fungal attacks.
    --  The berry-like cones of the common juniper, a close relative of
        red-cedar Christmas trees, are used to flavor gin.
    --  The Fraser Fir is considered the Cadillac because of its great
        looks/smell and needle retention.
And, coming soon is the Doug Fir app for iPhones.

SOURCE  Millersville University

Millersville University

Web Site: http://www.millersville.edu

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