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The seedlings you very kindly sent me are coming along nicely but haven't reached flowering size yet.
A natural 'cloud pine' (Attachment Link)
The roots look like something from a Salvador Dali painting. Any idea how this occurred? It was hard to tell, but there appeared to be a great deal of erosion around the roots. Did you actually see this tree and photograph it? Sorry, I had to ask. There is so much AI fake and maliciousness out there these days. So sad that some do not have anything better to do with their lives. :'(
A natural 'cloud pine'
I like that 'Jacob' very much, but my H.niger from Holubeck seeds from Italy was even better. Sadly it died one winter, but here is a seedling from it, and this is two years older than seedlings I sent you. So hopefully yours look like this soon. Flowers are very big.
This one has indeed larger flowers Leena. I also have 'Jacob', but it never had so many flower stems like yours and actually is short lived; a new seedling takes its place every 2-3 years. I should probably find another location for it.
I also have 'Jacob', but it never had so many flower stems like yours and actually is short lived; a new seedling takes its place every 2-3 years. I should probably find another location for it.
The pictures are indeed real Robert, but I understand your caution Those aren't roots but dead branches now hanging downward. Recently I came across this group of trees in a mountain valley SW of Fort William, Scotland. They all looked mature, with no evidence of replacement by seedlings probably due to grazing pressure by red deer. This particular tree had an enormous witches broom maybe 6-7m wide, which must have been old too given the slow growth rate. Unfortunately the point of emergence from the trunk wasn't easy to see from my vantage point, but perhaps you can just about make it out from the photo below. The broom also had small cones. Witches brooms are apparently not uncommon in Pinus sylvestris (or other pines), and have given rise to various dwarf conifer cultivars, but this was the first time I'd seen one. They can arise from bacterial or fungal infections but also from spontaneuos mutations in the meristem . Therefore they tend to occur more often at higher altitudes where solar irradiation is more intense. However this tree was only about 150m asl. (Attachment Link)