This is an excerpt from my tree encyclopedia, about Alder which is  personally my favorite tree along with Willow. I thought some people may find it  interesting or helpful.
ALDER
•The catkins (flowers) can be eaten for survival  purposes.
•The charcoal can be used as an ingredient in gunpowder.
•The  trunk is used for firewood when smoking game and fish.
•The wood is ideal to  use in bridges and troughs, because of it's waterproof properties.
•Red dye  can be made from the bark.
•Green dye can be made from the leaves.
•Brown  dye can be made from the twigs.
•The wood can be used for making furniture  and cabinets.
Magick
courage, banish nervousness and anxiety,  wealth, career opportunities, good financial fortune, bravery, growth, spiritual  developement, charisma, confidence, self journey, strength,  determination,charisma, leadership
•The trees are thought to be a  doorway to fairy realms. Their dense branches can be used as pathways to  communicate with pixies and fay.
•Carrying an alder twig while taking trips  by boat or ship can bring protection from harsh waters and promote good sense of  direction.
•It brings bad luck to handle alder wood with the thoughts of  death.
•The wood can be made into flutes, pipes, and whistles that can be  used to call on wind spirits.
•Divining rods from the wood can be used to  make it rain and banish drought.
Associations:
Fox, Masculine  Energy, Bran, Neptune, Water, Fire, Phoroneus
Medical
•Heating the  leaves in a bag and then holding it to your joints can help relieve  pain.
•Tea made from the dried bark can help with inflimation and a sore  throat.
•Placing the leaves in your shoes can help ease foot pain while  hiking.
•Chewing on one raw leaf can alleviate stomache pain.
•Boiled  alder leaves can be placed on insect stings to reduce swelling.
•Boiling the  bark and adding the water to a bath can can help with body aches or chicken  pox.
Species
Common Alder
Zone: 3-7
Habitat: damp or  wet soils, moist woodlands, riversides, swamps, tolerate poor  soils
Identification: Grows to a large sized shrub with round green leaves  and oval shaped lenticels or "tears" in the bark. The leaves have a bit of a  ragged edge that looks similar to torn paper. They also often times curve in at  the end of the leaf like a heart. They have horizontal symmetrical viens going  out from both sides of the center vien of the leaf. They have long yellow-brown  catkins and small red clusters of cones (that look like small pine cones) that  harden when pollinated.
Mountain Alder
Zone: 2-6
Habitat: moist  nutrient-rich soils, in forests along streams, bogs, near willow  trees
Identification: A small tree that tends to grow in clusters. They have  leaves similar to the common alder, but with a point at the end and they tend to  be rounder. The viens going through the leaf also often times have a bit of a  whiter tint to them. The front of the leaf is green, the back is lighter with a  hairy surface. Has catkins and cones just like common alder. Has yellow-brown  bark with oval shaped tears in the bark.
Red Alder
Zone: 2-6
Habitat:  grows after disturbances, full sun areas, wet soils
Identification: Small  tree with white bark. They do share the common alder's "tears" but they tend to  be sparcer and a bit bigger in size. Younger trees have a greenish-brown bark  with white tears. More than often this tree will house lichens. Leaves are very  similar to the common alder, with a slightly more oval shape.
Siberian  Alder
Zone: 3-7
Habitat: swamps, bogs, wet soils with long winters, near  streams
Identification: A small sized tree that has brownish-gray bark with  the typical alder "tears" (oval like scars) and catkins and cones. Leaves are  similar in comparison to the common alder, but are more vibrantly green. The  leaves also seem to be rounder and wider than the common alder.
Sitka Alder  (Green Alder)
Zone: 4-7
Habitat: near willows, rocky soils, river gravels,  stony slopes, mountains, tracks of avalanches
Identification: Sharing leaves  practically identical to the common alder this alder is differentiated by it's  whitish bark and white female cones. The male catkins are long and yellowish in  color. The leaves turn to a purple color in fall.
Speckled Alder
Zone:  2-6
Habitat: acedic soils, in dense forest areas with other trees and shrubs,  bogs, swamps, tundra
Identification: Practically identical to the common  alder, but with very distinct white "tears" in the bark. These tears are small,  but very thick on the bark and also appear on the branches- where as only on the  trunks of other alders. The bark is a rusty-brown color and branches tend to  grow very thick with this kind of alder.

 
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