tuckamore n also tuckamil, tucken-more, tuckermel, tuckermill,
tuckermore DC ~ Nfld (1895-). For tucken-more, see TUCKING BUSH and
MORE n. See also TUCK2. (a) Small stunted evergreen tree with gnarled
spreading roots, forming closely matted ground-cover on the barrens; also attrib; (b)
collectively, low stunted vegetation; scrub.
1863 MORETON 31
Tucken-mores. Small low-grown shrubs and creeping plants. 1866 WILSON 37 In the hollows
are the tuckermore bushes, which is a dwarf juniper, with strong branches at right angles
to the stem, and closely interlacing each other: the tops of these bushes are level, as
if they had been clipped. To walk upon these tuckermores, or penetrate their branches, is
equally impracticable. 1868 HOWLEY MS Reminiscences 9 The country is nearly level
with scarcely any woods except occasional patches of tucking bushes (Tuckamores). 1891
PACKARD 84 Half-way down, as [the vale] widens out, [it becomes] choked with a stunted
spruce and fir growth, or what the people call 'tucking,' or 'tuckermel-bush.' 1895 J
A Folklore viii, 39 ~ , in some places tuckamil, a clump of spruce, growing
almost flat on the ground and matted together, found on the barrens and bleak, exposed
places. Ibid viii, 288 I drawed down to the tuckamores aside the pond and got twict
thirty and varty yards from un. I lets drive and the loo' dove. 1919 GRENFELL2
229 He had gone through his snow racquets and actually lost the bows later, smashing them
all up as he repeatedly fell through between logs and tree-trunks and 'tuckamore.' 1927
RULE 70 Travelling alongshore between Bonne Bay and Cow Head, I sometimes used the
sloping surface of tuckermill as a couch to rest upon. 1970 Evening Telegram 21
May, p. 3 We proceeded as usual to the Witless Bay Line ... and from thence some 13 miles
on foot in over the tuckamores. C 70-12 Tuckamore is a sort of low bush which grows in
the marshes and in the small valleys. It is in the tuckamore that the path of a rabbit is
most likely to be found. 1971 NOSEWORTHY 258 Tuckamoors or tuckamoor trees [are] low
bushes on the barrens, about knee-high. 1981 Evening Telegram 17 Oct, p. 8 A good
(and bad) cross-section of ptarmigan habitat (i.e. prostrate balsam, tuckamores, high
plant or shrub cover, open tundra, rock exposures, marshes, etc).
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