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Thanks for reading. This is a post from Tree Notes at http://treenotes.blogspot.com . Photos and text copyright © 2006-2010, Genevieve L. Netz. All rights reserved. This feed is intended for personal use only and is not to be republished on or off the internet. My e-mail address is gnetz51@gmail.com .

Pinus echinata: Shortleaf pine, yellow pine
The Commonwealth of Kentucky has four native pine species --
- Pinus echinata
- Pinus strobus
- Pinus rigida
- Pinus virginiana
Today, we'll take a brief look at
Pinus echinata, and we'll look at the other three in the future.
In Kentucky, we often refer to
Pinus echinata as yellow pine, but it has several common names. The
National Forest Service's Sylvics Manual notes that "Depending upon locale, the species is also called shortleaf yellow, southern yellow, oldfield, shortstraw, or Arkansas soft pine."
The names "shortleaf" and "shortstraw" are a bit misleading. The needles of
Pinus echinata can grow up to 5 inches long!
Pinus echinata is a native tree of
21 states, mostly in the southeastern United States. It has been logged extensively, so it is not as common in the Kentucky woods as it once was.
Shortleaf pine is used for plywood and wood pulp, as well as for
lumber.
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Yellow pine on a rocky slope
Photo by cm195902 |
Pinus echinata can grow
up to 100 feet in height or even more, in a favorable location. It doesn't do well in calcium-rich, higher pH soils.
In Kentucky, yellow pine's preference for an acidic soil explains why it grows
mostly in our eastern highlands. There it finds a home in well-drained, sandstone-based (sandy) slopes and valleys with mildly to moderately acidic soil. In the Bluegrass region and western Kentucky, our soils are often limestone-based, thus less acidic and less hospitable to yellow pine.
You can identify
Pinus echinata by its needles which occur in bundles of 2 (or sometimes 3). Its cones are egg-shaped, up to 2-1/2 inches in length. Each scale on a mature cone of shortleaf pine has a pointy little prickle.
In Trees & Shrubs of Kentucky, Mary E. Wharton and Roger W. Barbour write,
A mature yellow pine is altogether noble in aspect. Its tall straight trunk with a map-patterned bark stands in unquestioned dignity bearing a lofty crown of slender branches. It is handsome in parks and large lawns, and in such places it should be planted more frequently.
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W.D. Brush - USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database |
Thanks for reading. This is a post from Tree Notes at http://treenotes.blogspot.com . Photos and text copyright © 2006-2010, Genevieve L. Netz. All rights reserved. This feed is intended for personal use only and is not to be republished on or off the internet. My e-mail address is gnetz51@gmail.com .

Virtues of an under-appreciated tree family
As "yard trees", willows doesn't get much respect from me. They tend to have:
(1) brittle branches that break easily in high winds or icy conditions,
(2) water-seeking roots that will clog sewer lines, and
(3) short lives.
I'm generalizing about the 75+ species of North American willows here, but those attributes should make any sensible homeowner wonder about
the wisdom of planting a willow near his house!
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Black Willow, Salix nigra. Morton Arboretum
Wikimedia image by Bruce Marlin
|
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Salix nigra catkins
Wikimedia image by SB Johnny. |
Nonetheless, willows (
Salix spp.) have their good side, especially when kept where God intended them to grow. Many of our North America willows occur naturally in wetlands and on stream margins. There, a dense mat of willow roots is a good thing. It can reduce erosion and help control floods.
Willows are often a pioneer species -- the first woody plant to take root and grow in a formerly barren area. They are useful in land reclamation projects, such as land that has been strip mined, old industrial sites, etc. (Willows can be invasive, however, so get advice from your local university extension office before mass-planting them.)
Wherever willows grow, they provide habitat and food to wildlife. They have helped to feed and shelter people too! Historically, young, tender willow buds, twigs, and leaves were a food of some of the indigenous people of Canada and Alaska. And willow, though a soft, weak wood, has served many building purposes when better wood was unavailable. Basket weavers have used the long, supple, young twigs of willow for centuries. Bent-wood furniture making, another time-honored craft, also uses willow branches.
Willow bark contains salicin, a mild analgesic. It is an ancient remedy, a
forefather to aspirin as we know it today. Hippocrates wrote about willow bark tea several centuries before the birth of Christ. Many of the Indian tribes of our continent
used bark, leaves, roots, and sap from native willows as medicinal remedies. The European settlers were also familiar with the benefits of willow teas and powders.
Nowadays, most of us buy manufactured pain pills, but willow-bark tea is still an effective, though slower-acting, pain reliever.
Many recipes for making it can be found online. If you decide to try it, you'll have to collect some willow bark. Remember not to girdle (cut a strip all the way around) the willow's trunk, or you'll kill it. And remember all the usual cautions about aspirin consumption.
Willows also contain high levels of a plant growth hormone called auxin. You can buy powdered auxin to stimulate the growth of roots on hard-to-propagate cuttings. Or, you can
make auxin-rich willow water by boiling small pieces of willow twigs. One method is to stand the cuttings in room-temperature willow water for 24 to 48 hours, and then plant them. Dampen the medium or soil with willow-water after planting, and follow up with more willow-water whenever dry.
With all that auxin flowing through their systems, willows are notable -- notorious! -- for fast growth. That makes them an excellent
source of biomass for energy production. Scientists are also looking at some of the
willow species for bio-engineering. Their fast growth and prodigious intake of water may make them good candidates for cleaning up certain industrial contaminants.
Willows are unique and useful plants (despite a few bad traits). They deserve our respect, affection, and appreciation!
Thanks for reading. This is a post from Tree Notes at http://treenotes.blogspot.com . Photos and text copyright © 2006-2010, Genevieve L. Netz. All rights reserved. This feed is intended for personal use only and is not to be republished on or off the internet. My e-mail address is gnetz51@gmail.com .

Historic trees in Savannah GA
Should I have the opportunity to travel to Savannah, Georgia, I want to visit the Bonaventure Cemetery. It is known for its beautiful
live oaks (
Quercus virginiana) and for being the burial place of Johnny Mercer and Conrad Aiken. I've been curious about it ever since reading
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.
Bonaventure Cemetery overlooks the Wilmington River. The site was once part of a 600 acre farm named Bonaventure, established in 1762 by Colonel John Mullryne and his wife Claudia. Colonel Mullryne laid out an internal road system for the property and planted live oaks at close intervals along the roadsides. Some of these roadways today are the famous "oak alleys" of Bonaventure Cemetery.
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An antique stereoscopic view of
an oak alley at Bonaventure Cemetery.
Image from Wikimedia Commons |
A family cemetery was established in the 1790s by a later owner of the plantation, Josiah Tattnall. The Tattnall family sold the plantation in 1846 to Peter Wiltberger. The Wiltbergers opened a 70-acre public cemetery (Evergreen Cemetery) on the property and assumed care of the original Tattnall burying ground (Old Bonaventure Cemetery). Evergreen Cemetery was taken over by the city of Savannah in 1907. The entire site, now 160 acres, is known as Bonaventure Cemetery today.
Donald Grant Mitchell wrote about Bonaventure Cemetery in
Rural Studies: With Hints for Country Places. This book was published in 1867, so the live oaks were probably about 100 years old at the time of his visit.
Near to Savannah, in Georgia, and upon one of the creeks making into the irregular shores thereabout, is a cemetery called, if I remember rightly, Buena Ventura. In old times, any visitor at the Pulaski used to find his way there, and was richly repaid for the visit.
There was no proper "keeping" to the grounds. You passed in under a lumbering old gateway of unhewn timber; the paths were not carefully tended; there was much of rampant and almost indecorous undergrowth; the tombs were mossy, and the graves, many of them, sunken; but great liveoaks over-reached your path, and from their gnarled limbs hung swaying pennants of that weird gray moss of the Southern swamp lands—festooned, tangled, streaming down—now fluttering in a light breeze, and again drooping, as if with the weight of woe, to the very earth.
There was something mysteriously solemn and grave-like in it. The gnarled oaks and the slowly swaying plumes of gray told the completest possible story of the place. Had there been no tombs there, you would have said that it was the place of places where tombs should lie and the dead sleep. I have alluded to the scene only to show what and how much may be done by foliage and tree limbs, with their investing mosses, to give character to such a spot. (Source)
In
A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf, John Muir recalled the days he spent
camping in the Bonaventure Cemetery in 1867 while he was waiting in Savannah for money to arrive. Of the live oaks, he wrote:
The most conspicuous glory of Bonaventure is its noble avenue of live-oaks. They are the most magnificent planted trees I have ever seen, about fifty feet high and perhaps three or four feet in diameter, with broad spreading leafy heads. The main branches reach out horizontally until they come together over the driveway, embowering it throughout its entire length, while each branch is adorned like a garden with ferns, flowers, grasses, and dwarf palmettos.
But of all the plants of these curious tree-gardens the most striking and characteristic is the so-called Long Moss (Tillandsia usneoides). It drapes all the branches from top to bottom, hanging in long silvery-gray skeins, reaching a length of not less than eight or ten feet, and when slowly waving in the wind they produce a solemn funereal effect singularly impressive. (Source)
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Live oaks at Bonaventure Cemetery, early 1900s.
Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs
Division, Detroit Publishing Company Collection. |
I doubt if the cemetery is as overgrown and natural a place today as it once was, but its live oaks are still there. In 2004, they were placed on the Georgia Landmark and Historic Tree Register.
The Savannah Department of Cemeteries
reports that the live oaks have been in "slow decline" for the last century, after surviving a number of major hurricanes during the 1800s. I hope that some younger live oaks are growing so the unique atmosphere and beauty of Bonaventure Cemetery is preserved for future generations.
Further reading
Quercus virginiana
Live Oak, USDA Forest Service Sylvics Manual
Floridata: Quercus virginiana
Discover the Bonaventure Cemetery
Bonaventure Cemetery, SavannahThanks for reading. This is a post from Tree Notes at http://treenotes.blogspot.com . Photos and text copyright © 2006-2010, Genevieve L. Netz. All rights reserved. This feed is intended for personal use only and is not to be republished on or off the internet. My e-mail address is gnetz51@gmail.com .