" of the 'Corcorcor' cultivar The fragrant, finely grained, soft, brittle, very light, pinkish to brownish red
heartwood is very durable, even in contact with soil. Because of its resistance to
decay, the wood is often used for fence posts.
Moths avoid the aromatic wood, and therefore it is in demand as lining for clothes chests and closets, which are often denominated "cedar closets" and "
cedar chests". If correctly prepared, excellent
English longbows,
flatbows, and Native American
sinew-backed bows can be made from it. It is marketed as "eastern red cedar" and "aromatic cedar". The best portions of the heartwood are one of the few woods that are suitable for making
pencils, however the supply had so diminished by the 1940s that the wood of the
incense-cedar largely replaced it. The fruits also yield an essential oil which contains mostly D-Limonene. The oil derived from foliage and twigs has two main constituents:
safrole and
limonene. One minor compound is the
podophyllotoxin, a non-
alkaloid toxin lignan. Native American tribes have historically used poles of eastern red cedar wood to demarcate agreed tribal hunting territories. French traders named
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, which denotes "red stick", from the reddish color of these poles. Some nations continue to use it ceremonially. The
Cahokia Woodhenge series of
timber circles that the pre-Columbian
Mississippian culture in western
Illinois erected were constructed of massive logs of eastern juniper. One iteration of such a circle,
Woodhenge III, which is thought to have been constructed circa 1000 AD, had 48 posts in the circle of in diameter and a 49th pole in the center. Among many Native American cultures, the smoke of burning eastern red cedar is believed to expel evil spirits prior to conducting a ceremony, such as a healing ceremony. During the
Dust Bowl drought of the 1930s, the Prairie States Forest Project encouraged farmers to plant shelterbelts, i.e. wind breaks, of eastern red cedar throughout the Great Plains of the US. The trees thrive in adverse conditions. Tolerant of both drought and cold, they grow well in rocky, sandy, and clayey soils. Competition between individual trees is minimal, and therefore they can be closely planted in rows, in which situation they still grow to full height, creating a solid windbreak in a short time. A number of
cultivars have been selected for
horticulture, including 'Canaertii' (narrow conical; female) 'Corcorcor' (with a dense, erect crown; female), 'Goldspire' (narrow conical with yellow foliage), and 'Kobold' (dwarf). Some cultivars previously listed under this species, notably 'Skyrocket', are actually cultivars of
J. scopulorum. In the Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma
Ozarks, eastern red cedar is commonly used as a
Christmas tree. This is the most widely used wood for making blocks for
recorders. There are numerous properties that it possesses that make it uniquely suitable for this, such as good moisture absorption, low expansion when wet (so it does not crack the recorder head), and mild antiseptic properties. Eastern red cedar is considered effective as a shelter-belt tree and for erosion control. Being coniferous, red cedar has dense evergreen foliage which makes it an ideal windbreak. The tree's extensive root system allows it to survive drought, and helps to retain surrounding topsoil during dry, windy conditions. == See also ==