Plywood Species guide
Douglas Fir Plywood (DFP/FIR)
Canadian Softwood Plywood (CSP/SPF)
Aspen/Poplar Plywood


Reproduced with permission from the BC Ministry of Forests

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Douglas Fir Plywood (DFP/FIR)

Sitka Spruce

Habitat:

In coastal forests, Sitka spruce grows with western hemlock, western red cedar, and yellow-cedar. The forest floor is often thick with mosses, and horsetails, blueberries and deer fern flourish.
Black-tail deer abound, especially in the Queen Charlotte Islands, where they were introduced without their natural predator, the gray wolf. The productive floodplains along coastal valleys support grizzly and black bears as well as many smaller mammals.

Uses of Sitka Spruce:

Sitka spruce is valued for its wood, which is light, soft, and relatively strong and flexible. It is used for general construction, ship building and plywood. The wood has excellent acoustic properties and is used to make sounding boards in pianos and other musical instruments such as violins and guitars.