Can anyone identify this tree?
It's been cut down, so this google maps photo from 2008 is all that's left of it.
>>924353
gozirra
>>924355
holy shit it is
>>924353
This is in UK, surrey btw. Forgot to mention.
>>924353
does it have leaves or needles?
>>924497
I would guess needles. Those don't look like how leaves form on a tree.
>>924353
It was my fucking tree john! Go find a fucking hobby and stop complaining about my god damn property you faggot!
>>924391
Spent a week in UK identifing trees actually. I can't really help you out though since they trim and top their trees so wierd you can never get a good idea based on shape... sorry buddy
My guess is a 'lime tree' hurt because they're planted everywhere, but I'm just pulling that out my ass
>pic is of my favorite tree they cut down. Overy 100 y/o American Elm finally got killed by DED...
>>924353
base makes it look like a distant cousin of a redwood, maybe someone decided to plant a redwood there. Very possible, redwoods were introduced to UK as early as 1851.
Cedar.
looks like a sequoia
Cequoia
come back in 1500 years, if it looks like this it was a sequoia
>>924353
that's me mate barry
shame about the death
rip barry
>>928991
FUCK I thought that looked like barry.
†RIP†
https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/features/how-the-giant-sequoia-came-to-england
>>924355
>>928764
I was leaning towards redwood and then he said UK and all of my knowledge went out the window
>>928769
agree
>>929544
Redwoods and Sequoias were introduced to the UK in the 1850's. In fact Sequoias were an extremely popular tree to plant in Victorian gardens. There are hundreds of of specimens in Britain that are over 150 feet tall.
It isn't a redwood, and it doesn't have the classic sequoia spire shape even though the foliage looks somewhat sequoia-eqe. Probably a cedar.