Tall spruce with blue-green needles and dense conic crown; older trees become columnar with lower branches sweeping downward.
1We went over to the group of silver spruce near the house.
2Horse and rider lurched out of sight among the silver spruce.
3Then you can see the aspens and silver spruce next.
4Far below them a pale mist obscured the beautiful silver spruce which had reached their upward limit.
5The rider had whipped out of the saddle and stood poised, strong as the trunk of a silver spruce.
6This silver spruce was five feet through at the base, rugged, gray-seamed, thick all the way to its lofty height.
7Not until next day did we climb farther to the deepening, darkening forest, and at last to the silver spruce.
8There were other trees than pines, and particularly one kind, cone-shaped, symmetrical, and bright, which Dick called a silver spruce.
9The most attractive tree I have seen is the silver spruce, Abies Englemanii, near of kin to what is often called the balsam fir.
10A group of small silver spruces away from the fire was my sleeping place.
11Then still higher up I espied some silver spruces, most exquisite trees of the mountain forests.
12Over the tops of the big silver spruces he traced the outline of Sleep Mountain against the southern sky.
13The silver spruces sent down long, graceful branches that had to be brushed aside or stooped under as we rode along.