About

A large, robust, deciduous perennial from tropical and subtropical America with erect, cane-like stems, large, oval, dark green leaves and tall, branching panicles of small, white flowers in summer. Grown as a medicinal and culinary herb (American ginseng) for a shaded, moist, woodland garden.

About the genus

Pinus can be shrubs or large, evergreen trees, some species with attractive bark, developing an irregular outline with age and bearing long needle-like leaves in bundles of 2, 3 or 5; conspicuous cones may fall or remain on the tree for years

Plant details

Suggested usesSpecimen planting, shelterbelts, large gardens. Dwarf cultivars suit rock gardens and containers.

Care notes

CultivationWell-drained, preferably acidic soil in full sun. Most pines are very drought-tolerant once established.
PruningNo regular pruning needed. Remove dead branches. Candle-prune in spring for density on dwarf types.
PropagationSow seed in spring (stratify first). Grafting for cultivars.
Pest resistancePine processionary moth, adelgids, pine shoot beetle. Generally robust.
Disease resistanceDothistroma needle blight, Diplodia tip blight. Good air circulation helps.