Korean Black Pine in training.

I did some works on this tree today.
Before complete pruning of spring shoots
00345ACF-085A-4D1E-8F28-C3FA20ACEEB4.jpeg

After. The arrow pointing to the branch which was at the front of trunk
3240FB70-7A92-4D35-8C37-EC9F2D651FAA.jpeg 5728BF71-7DA7-4CA8-8093-FCE7E31B8132.jpeg 93A6B5B2-59D1-49D5-9FDD-76310EF03132.jpeg

That branch was removed to make the trunk line going unimpeded. The wound.
99853AD7-D082-402C-8F94-5B59A92BE0D7.jpeg

skin grafting
F6E55772-E81B-4694-AAA5-CCA3A53197D1.jpeg

There was a old unhealed scar on the trunk
306FA1BF-0AD7-4AC1-89F6-D186411BFAF0.jpeg

It was made into fresh wound knob cutter.
4F26FBBF-67C1-48C7-8CDE-F2FB539374AA.jpeg

skin grafting
7FE93B4A-665A-4C74-BE84-C31692E890EE.jpeg

grafting tape was used
148B878D-A225-470B-BC73-F12E9827F831.jpeg

be continued
 
Could the Korean varieties of these trees be hardy in zone 4 with protection?
I used to live in Korea for several years... before moving to China. First of all KBP are pretty much everywhere in the mountains though growing naturally... temperature in Korea can go in Jan-Feb to -20C (or below... I was skiing once at -24C) but zone 4, where you are, can go as low as -34C so there is a difference. They will clearly need winter protection. My KBP did very well outside over couple of winters with only protection from wind though winters were more in -15C to -20C range.
 
Back
Top Bottom