Pinus caribaea - Caribbean Pine
Posted: December 20th, 2014, 3:16 pm
Not widely used as a bonsai as far as I can tell from forum activity and I have one main reason I use them - I can get them for nothing.
I have a spot in NQ, near Cardwell to more teasing, where these grow on the side of the road. It is near a forestry plantation, bl##dy near in fact. I know them to be this species as I have researched the forestry website and they use elliotti or caribaea or a hybrid of both (mine might be the hybrid) but these are definitely not elliotti due to the bark texture. Which I will say apart from being free is the other main reason I love this pine, man has it lovely chunky, scaly, deep fissured bark, enough I'm getting excited about bark again.
I sought the landowners permission for admission as now I have some with I hope more to follow.
The downsides, yes the needles are long, I am working on them and it is successful but will it ever get to Black Pine size, NO I DON'T THINK SO, LIVE WITH IT. When these are grown they are grown in an absolutely straight telegraph pole standard with a bit of foliage at the top, that by the way is the way we NQ'ers see Pines, straight with all the branches pointing at the sky and then only at the top of the tree.
So to get these things to bend and accept it can be problematic again these things can be overcome, in young trees they see to accept the bend quite well, in the older trees, well I visit them one year, cut the top off them and bend the new growth, you will see examples as follows.
I found this site about five years ago (dammit I have to say it, Liz, my wife found it, there it's out) as we drove through NQ. Since then I have visited the site frequently and removed the following trees. Over these years I have wired them on site, thrown bits of truck tires over them to bend them down, cut the tops off them, simply bent them by hand, de-shooted them, added dead foliage to the base for water retention, basically treated them as my own. This has also been met with much disappointment as the site has been wiped out twice by cyclone, and once by the following roadworks. On my last trip north in November, road signs were out again, right on this corner, to say major roadworks were about to happen again. I fear for my next trip north in February to see the site demolished and any trees I have commence are yet again Graded to the ground, we'll see.
See what I mean about back stories, they help you picture the tree (or you just aren't reading this cr#p and just lookin' at the picture,
without further delay.............To the trees
(and yes theres a few photos this time)
This was one of the first to be removed, pencil thin it was and yet still with the lovely corky bark, which by topic of conversation only appears on the tree after about five years of age, so this tree regardless of it's size is now more than ten years old.
I have attempted to bend this tree in the past and it resulted in a lot of the bark flaking off, not a result I was looking for, see photo
So much wiser (?) I proceed for the second time,
my second pair of hand
all raffia'd up an no place to go
and wired for sound
and the bending result
I have a spot in NQ, near Cardwell to more teasing, where these grow on the side of the road. It is near a forestry plantation, bl##dy near in fact. I know them to be this species as I have researched the forestry website and they use elliotti or caribaea or a hybrid of both (mine might be the hybrid) but these are definitely not elliotti due to the bark texture. Which I will say apart from being free is the other main reason I love this pine, man has it lovely chunky, scaly, deep fissured bark, enough I'm getting excited about bark again.
I sought the landowners permission for admission as now I have some with I hope more to follow.
The downsides, yes the needles are long, I am working on them and it is successful but will it ever get to Black Pine size, NO I DON'T THINK SO, LIVE WITH IT. When these are grown they are grown in an absolutely straight telegraph pole standard with a bit of foliage at the top, that by the way is the way we NQ'ers see Pines, straight with all the branches pointing at the sky and then only at the top of the tree.
So to get these things to bend and accept it can be problematic again these things can be overcome, in young trees they see to accept the bend quite well, in the older trees, well I visit them one year, cut the top off them and bend the new growth, you will see examples as follows.
I found this site about five years ago (dammit I have to say it, Liz, my wife found it, there it's out) as we drove through NQ. Since then I have visited the site frequently and removed the following trees. Over these years I have wired them on site, thrown bits of truck tires over them to bend them down, cut the tops off them, simply bent them by hand, de-shooted them, added dead foliage to the base for water retention, basically treated them as my own. This has also been met with much disappointment as the site has been wiped out twice by cyclone, and once by the following roadworks. On my last trip north in November, road signs were out again, right on this corner, to say major roadworks were about to happen again. I fear for my next trip north in February to see the site demolished and any trees I have commence are yet again Graded to the ground, we'll see.
See what I mean about back stories, they help you picture the tree (or you just aren't reading this cr#p and just lookin' at the picture,
without further delay.............To the trees
(and yes theres a few photos this time)
This was one of the first to be removed, pencil thin it was and yet still with the lovely corky bark, which by topic of conversation only appears on the tree after about five years of age, so this tree regardless of it's size is now more than ten years old.
I have attempted to bend this tree in the past and it resulted in a lot of the bark flaking off, not a result I was looking for, see photo
So much wiser (?) I proceed for the second time,
my second pair of hand
all raffia'd up an no place to go
and wired for sound
and the bending result