An evergreen tree up to 80 ft high in the wild, with the aspect of a small-leaved yew; branches drooping; branchlets usually in whorls; bark of trunk peeling. Leaves linear or linear-lanceolate, 1⁄2 to 11⁄8 in. long, 1⁄10 in. wide, abruptly narrowed at the base to a short stalk; tapered more gradually at the apex to a very fine point, dull dark green above, with two comparatively broad, glaucous bands of stomata beneath. Male and female flowers on the same plant; the former in shortly stalked, cylindrical spikes 1⁄4 in. long, produced in a cluster near the end of the shoot. The fruit is a small cone, solitary at the end of the twigs, globose in the main, 1⁄2 in. diameter; the scales terminating in a broad, flattened, spine-like point. Bot. Mag., t. 8664.
Native of Chile from 35° to 45° S, commonest in the Lake region, where it occurs in Nothofagus dombeyi forest and in the stands of Fitzroya cupressoides; it is also found in Argentina in the region of Lake Nahuel Huapi. It was introduced to Britain by William Lobb for Messrs Veitch, but has never become common. Even in the wild it is a slow-growing tree, so it is not surprising that no large specimens are known in this country. By far the finest is a tree at Woodhouse, Lyme Regis, measuring 55 × 51⁄4 ft (1970); and there are two trees at Kilmacurragh in Eire, both about 40 ft high and 43⁄4 and 41⁄4 ft in girth (1966). The following smaller specimens have been measured recently in the south of England: Wakehurst Place, Sussex, pl. 1914, 29 × 2 ft (1969); Leonardslee, Sussex, 36 × 21⁄4 ft (1969); National Pinetum, Bedgebury, Kent, pl. 1925, 23 × 11⁄2 ft (1969); Killerton, Devon, 26 × 11⁄2 ft (1970).