Thanks very much for sharing. Those Mendocino Cypress are really nice trees.
View attachment 27253
Monterey pine collected by Mr. Kinoshita about 50 years ago. The furrows in the bark are over an inch deep and the old bark extends out to the smallest branches.
.
Thank you to everyone ... and World Series Champion San Francisco Giants!
Anyone have any more pictures of this Monterey Pine, close ups of the bark, or more info on this tree? I've never seen one with such nice bark. Really Cool!
-Thanks Tim for that picture! sorry I just saw it.
very interesting, thanks for the info Al. That bark is just really nice and also differnt from the, "Monterey Pines" i've seen before, don't know if i've seen bark that looked like that on anything but JBP before. thanks
It does not have bark like a JBP at all. The deep fissures are long and the bark is stepped and tight. It is not flaky like JBP.
I have a close up somewhere. I only have about 129.6 thousand pictures to sort thru.
I also noticed that there are about five companies selling seeds with my picture of my teachers tree as a model. Talk about copyright infringement!
Thanks for the link, Al. I'll post the photo here to show the tree in its prime. Sadly, it is not looking so healthy now...
View attachment 27365
On consideration, Mr. Kinoshita did tell me that the tree was given to him by a friend and I inferred that it had been collected. I wonder about the Spain connection though.
Regardless, this tree and the black pine in the Lake Merritt collection that belonged to my teacher, Mas Imazumi, may be, in my opinion, two of the finest pine bonsai in America.