Garden Dilemmas, Delights & Discoveries, Ask Mary Stone, New Jersey Garden blog

Prized Umbrella Pine

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Hello fellow readers, One of my favorite evergreen conifer specimens is the Umbrella Pine (Sciadopitys verticillata). It sits to the right of the garage giving it protection from winds as advised by experts when planted in zone 5. Michael Dir, the guru of woody plants, lists its hardiness as zone 5 to 7, though “not as prosperous in zone 7 as further North.” While officially listed as Zone 6, I consider most of us in a 5B. This winter’s dance in the single digits supports the theory.

Mary Stone, Garden Dilemmas, Ask Mary Stone,Gardening tips, Garden Blogs, Stone Associates Landscape Design, Garden Blog, Mary Stone, Sciadopitys verticillata, Umbrella Pine

Sciadopitys verticillata, Umbrella Pine

Umbrella Pines can be pricey but well worth it. 

My cherished plant cost three hundred bucks (wholesale) at five-foot-tall when I planted it and now tippy tops to the second-floor, making her about twenty feet. They say a very slow grower, growing about six inches a year; mine must be speedier than most as she’s grown fifteen feet since I dug her in sixteen years ago. She’s looser in form now, which I theorized having to do with being in afternoon shade. But maybe that’s not the reason at all.

While acidic soil and full sun are best, at least six hours of direct sun daily, part sun (three to six hours) can work too. Late afternoon shade is beneficial in hotter zones. It turns out specimens often loosen in form as they grow older (sound familiar?). Branches become “more pendulous and spreading,” writes Michael Dirr. The neat thing is because of the looseness, the striking reddish-brown exfoliating bark of my prized plant is more visible now. And, it makes for a perfect tree to decorate with outdoor ornaments. The white lights will remain until March, but the Christmas balls will come off way before then. For now, I’m enjoying how the snow caps each shiny ornament.

“It sounds like a dinosaur.”

When I mentioned I was writing about our Sciadopitys verticillata, Curt made an admiral attempt at reiterating the botanical name then concluded, “It sounds like a dinosaur.” And it is of sorts. The Umbrella Pine, also known as Japanese Umbrella Pine because of its origin, is considered a living fossil. Fossils with the plant date back 230 million years when dinosaurs walked our world. The way the two-toned dark and light green flat waxy needles whorl around each stem in an umbrella-like fashion even looks prehistoric. Imagine a plant with no close relatives that date back that long. Did I mention this living fossil is deer resistant? Apparently, there weren’t deer amongst the dinosaurs.

Garden Dilemmas? AskMaryStone@gmail.com (and now on your favorite Podcast App.)

a perennial garden with a white lattice fence and straight stone walkway and a dwarf umbrella pine

My client Ann’s dwarf Sciadopitys verticillata ‘Gruene Kugel.’

FYI: There are dwarf versions of Sciadopitys verticillata such as ‘Gruene Kugel, ‘a new selection from Germany, that my client Ann from Scotch Plains NJ found. It will grow four feet tall and three wide compared to the typical full-sized twenty-five to thirty feet tall and fifteen wide umbrella pines—a real cutie along the side of the rear patio we designed a few years back.

Link to more about Umbrella Pine – Sciadopitys verticillata

 

Mary Stone, owner of Stone Associates Landscape Design & Consulting. As a Landscape Designer, I am grateful for the joy of helping others beautify their surroundings which often leads to sharing encouragement and life experiences. These relationships inspired my weekly column published in THE PRESS, 'Garden Dilemmas? Ask Mary', began in 2012. I dream of growing the evolving community of readers into an interactive forum to share encouragement and support in Garden and Personal Recoveries - seeking nature’s inspirations, stimulating growth, weeding undesirables, embracing the unexpected. Thank you for visiting! Mary
  1. Diane Dellicker Reply

    Mary, I love the small one! Is that it, next to the down-spout? I love the big one too, but I doubt I’ll be around long enough to see it grow like that.

    • Mary Stone Reply

      Yes Diane, the dwarf variety is planted near Ann’s downspout. A real cutie. I enjoyed my umbrella pine even when it was a newbie in the garden, so don’t hesitate to plant one. Besides, you’re too feisty to be going anywhere anytime soon. Smile. Thanks for writing in, Mary

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