Colorado Blue Spruce

Picea pungens

Family

Pinaceae

Genus

Picea

About Our Collection

Fun Facts

  • Although widespread in cultivation, the Colorado blue spruce has only a scattered range in montane to subalpine zones of the Rocky Mountains. Charles Christopher Parry first collected the species in 1862, on Pikes Peak, near Colorado Springs, Colorado. 

  • In the wild, Colorado blue spruce can be found growing along mountain streams, perhaps explaining why these old Arboretum specimens were sited on a moist slope that drains into Bussey Brook. 

  • Charles Christopher Parry is also recognized for making the first scientific collections of other western species, including the Torrey pine (Pinus torreyana) and the bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata). 

  • Colorado blue spruce can display variable amounts of wax on their needles, causing the trees to appear white or bluish. This has prompted horticulturists to name dozens of cultivars based on foliage color.

Stats

Living Specimens
Specimens Dead or Removed
First Addition
Most Recent Addition
Tallest Specimen
Four-sided needles on the cultivar 'Iseli's Fastigiate'.William (Ned) Friedman
Spring cones.William (Ned) Friedman
Cultivar 'Moerheimii' showing waxy, blue foliage.Jonathan Damery

Living Specimens

Plant ID Accession Date Received As Origin Source