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Pinus peuce
( Macedonian Pine )
| Pinus peuce is a rather narrow, tall, slow growing evergreen pine. The needles are in fives, densely bundled, dark green, appearing blue green in overall effect. The habit is very upright, almost columnar in form. The bark is thin, gray-brown and scaly on older trees. The cones are cylindrical, 4 to 6 inches long, solitary or in groups of three or four. Prefers moist and well drained soil, full sun, otherwise quite adaptable. A good specimen tree. Native to the Balkans.
Pines are one of the most diverse groups of evergreen conifers, over 90 species are distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
Although most are large trees, they can take a low growing shrub form. Pines have been very important commercially, in timber production, as well as a variety of other manufactured products such as turpentine and rosin. They tend to be more tolerant of varying soil types and urban environments than either Picea or Abies. Pines tend to develop tap roots, so one should not attempt to transplant them from the wild. All species are grown from seed, with highly variable seed stratification requirements. They can be subject to many diseases, such as damping off, root rot, dieback, blister rust, canker, blight, scale, pine needle miner, pine weevil, bark beetles and pinewood nematode. Well situated plants should be relatively trouble free.
They suffer salt damage along highways and can get tip burn in areas of high sulfur dioxide or ozone.
In general they do not require fertilization, which can cause overgrowth. |
How to Grow this Plant:
Characteristics
Requirements
Fertilizing
Light
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Planting
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Miscellaneous
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