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Couples plant a Bermuda cedar as part of the ceremony.
Most notable of these was the juniper which evolved into the Bermuda cedar.
The vessels were all constructed of Bermuda cedar.
Efforts by the public and the government have been made to boost their populations along with the populations of the Bermuda cedar.
However the Bermuda cedar may take 200 years to reach full maturity, and the birds may not survive this long.
It was mostly covered by forests of Bermuda cedar, with mangrove marshes along its shores.
The Bermuda cedar boxes used to ship tobacco to England were reportedly worth more than their contents.
Juniperus bermudiana, commonly known as the Bermuda cedar.
The vegetation found in the reserve includes palmetto trees, Bermuda cedars and mangrove swamp.
It is dotted with Bermuda cedar and Sabal bermudana palmetto trees.
The colony's lightweight Bermuda cedar vessels were widely prized for their agility and speed, especially upwind.
In addition, between 1693 and 1878, the Bermuda legislature passed sixteen further acts placing restrictions on the uses of Bermuda cedar.
Many historic homes in Bermuda feature interior woodwork and furnishings made from Bermuda cedar.
The opening speech is given from a Bermuda Cedar seat fashioned in 1642, when meetings were still held in St. George's.
Food & Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations: "The Bermuda Cedar".
The first settlers built using the native and abundant Bermuda cedar, but such structures were rarely able to withstand either the normal winds or the occasional hurricane.
This species is most commonly known as Bermuda cedar, but is also referred to as Bermuda juniper.
In 1627, in an effort to conserve Bermuda's juniper forests, the local assembly passed legislation to restrict export of Bermuda cedar for shipbuilding.
They were built from local timber (Bermuda Cedar) and the salvaged spars and rigging of the wrecked Sea Venture.
Still, like the Bermuda cedar, the casuarina's foliage is resistant to wind and salt, and these features have made casuarinas popular with gardeners in Bermuda.
Bermuda Government, Department of Conservation Services: "Species Profile - Bermuda Cedar".
Inside, the style is British colonial, with a cool and contemporary twist: marble flooring, fragrant Bermuda cedar woodwork, exquisite bespoke furnishings and distinctive artwork.
Bermudians rapidly abandoned agriculture for shipbuilding, replanting farmland with the native juniper (Juniperus bermudiana, called Bermuda cedar) trees that grew thickly over the whole island.
Bermuda was the first place in the Americas to pass conservation laws, protecting the Bermuda petrel in 1616 and the Bermuda cedar in 1622.
When English settlers arrived in Bermuda, forests of Bermuda cedar flourished throughout the islands, and the species continued to thrive even as settlers developed the land.
Juniperus bermudiana is a species of juniper endemic to Bermuda.
Weed Notes: Juniperus bermudiana (pdf file).
When discovered, about 1505, the island's habitat was dominated by the remnant, old-growth forest of Bermuda Juniper (Juniperus bermudiana).
The company is named after the Juniperus bermudiana, cedar trees found only in Bermuda that are extremely hardy in the face of hurricanes and other adverse conditions.
Bermudians rapidly abandoned agriculture for shipbuilding, replanting farmland with the native juniper (Juniperus bermudiana, called Bermuda cedar) trees that grew thickly over the whole island.
It is also an introduced, invasive plant in Bermuda, where it was introduced to replace the Juniperus bermudiana windbreaks killed by juniper blight in the 1940s.
At the time of the first human settlement by shipwrecked English sailors in 1593, Bermuda was dominated by forests of Bermuda cedar (Juniperus bermudiana) with mangrove swamps on the coast.
On the next terrace there is a Juniperus bermudiana (Bermuda Cedar) planted by Winston Churchill in 1942 after his visit to the USA to meet President Franklin Roosevelt and address a Joint session of the United States Congress.
Due to the islands' isolation, for many years Bermuda remained an outpost of 17th-century British civilization, with an economy based on the use of the islands' Bermuda cedar (Juniperus bermudiana) trees for shipbuilding, and Bermudians' control of the Turks Islands, and their salt trade.