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  1. 12 kwi 2024 · Japanese Stone Pine, also frequently called the Dwarf Siberian Pine, is another true pine that is native to Japan but much less well-known than the other Pinus species of Japan. It is a slow-growing, dense, prostrate shrub, seldom growing more than 9 ft tall.

  2. 9 gru 2023 · When mature, Japanese black pine has a windswept appearance that works well in large, Japanese-themed landscapes, where it can make an excellent specimen plant. These trees are highly tolerant of salt spray and saline soil, so are a common choice for sun-drenched beachfront plantings.

  3. Pinus thunbergii (syn: Pinus thunbergiana), the black pine, [2] Japanese black pine, [3] or Japanese pine, [4] is a pine tree native to coastal areas of Japan (Kyūshū, Shikoku and Honshū) and South Korea.

  4. Japanese white pine is a dense, slow-growing evergreen with a smaller stature which makes it an excellent specimen for small landscapes and restricted spaces. Medium tree (25-40 feet), Large tree (more than 40 feet) Zone 4, Zone 5 (Northern Illinois), Zone 6 (City of Chicago), Zone 7.

  5. Pinus parviflora ‘Glauca’ (Japanese White Pine) is a small evergreen coniferous tree of dense, conical habit when young, but develops into a wide-spreading, irregularly shaped tree, with a broad, flattened canopy.

  6. Japanese White Pine is native to Japan and Korea. It is pyramidal and dense when young, but as it ages it becomes wider and flat-topped at the crown. It grows more than 12” a year, and becomes 10’-20’H × 10’-15’W in 10 years, spreading to 20’-40’H × 20’-50’W at maturity.

  7. ‘Thunderhead’ is a shrubby, compact cultivar of Pinus thunbergia, the Japanese Black Pine, native to the coastal areas of Japan and South Korea. The cultivar was a seedling selected at Angelica Nursery in Kennedyville, Maryland, in 1987.

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