Nice tree.
In Takeo, in Southwestern Japan, there is an Okusu, or a massive version of one of these trees on a hill slope in a bamboo grove. It's very beautiful, as it has been struck by lightning and the core burnt out, but it still grows.
I was reading the wiki, and found something interesting:
Chemical constituents
The species contains volatile chemical compounds in all plant parts, and the wood and leaves are steam distilled for the essential oils. Camphor laurel has six different chemical variants called chemotypes, which are camphor, linalool, 1,8-cineole, nerolidol, safrole, and borneol. In China, field workers avoid mixing chemotypes when harvesting by their odour.[4][5] The cineole fraction of camphor laurel is used in China to manufacture fake "eucalyptus oil".[6]
The chemical variants (or chemotypes) seem dependent upon the country of origin of the tree. e.g., C. camphora grown in Taiwan and Japan is normally very high in linalool, often between 80 and 85%. In India and Sri Lanka, the high camphor variety/chemotype remains dominant. C. camphora grown in Madagascar, though, is high in 1,8-cineole (averaging between 40 and 50%). The essential oil from the Madagascar trees is commercially known as ravintsara.[7]
I found that to be very interesting, that varieties have distinctive aromas, not unlike Mango.
How would you describe the aroma of the one you have access to?