Wires_Guy_wires
Imperial Masterpiece
Oh no, I was talking about scots pines! Sorry for the miscommunication. The P. sylvestris from Italy are known to have smaller needles and shorter internodes, the norwegian type backbuds like JBP without the fat branches that the watererii cultivar has (but the watererii has a shade of blue that's just awesome).Gulf Coast pine choices are pretty much limited to what can grow under fairly tropical conditions. In terms of imports, the ones I’m aware of that work here are Pinus thunbergii (JBP), Pinus densiflora (JRP), Pinus halepensis (Aleppo pine) and Pinus canariensis (Canary Island pine). Then there are the natives to the pineywoods of East Texas, the loblolly and shortleaf pine (a close relative of the loblolly). JBP and JRP are the only ones I’ve seen successfully adapted to bonsai culture. Ive worked with loblolly and aleppo and I know others have as well. I’d say the jury is still out, but there might be some promise there. I know one or two people that have tried without luck to grow virginia, bristlecone, ponderosa and 2 needle piñon, as well as a number of others.
- S
I'm far from tropical temperatures. Sure, we get tropical temperature summers but our autumns, winters and springs can get pretty cold. Halepensis, longaeva, banksiana, JRP and ponderosa seem to do fine here. Halepensis surprised me, since their natural range usually doesn't get any frosts. Longaeva surprises me because I'm more or less at/below sealevel and they're known to hate low elevations. I'm having a hard time importing seed from the US, but rigida is still on my wanted list. I had one but the birds yanked it from the pot and it died. I'll have a look at the other ones you mention, there might be something in there for me too.
But I'm derailing this thread by talking about my own favorites ;-)