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evergreen bonsai tree for sale

evergreen bonsai tree for sale Japanese Black Pine Seeds

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Description

evergreen bonsai tree for sale Japanese Black Pine SeedsCoastal strength. Bonsai soul. A pine unlike any other. Pinus thunbergii, the Japanese Black Pine, is the most important pine in Japanese culture and one of the most striking conifers available to western growers. Its dense, dark needles, dramatically textured bark, and naturally irregular growth habit make it the defining pine of Japanese gardens, coastal landscapes, and bonsai collections worldwide. Hardy, adaptable, and highly tolerant of salt

Coastal strength. Bonsai soul. A pine unlike any other.

Pinus thunbergii, the Japanese Black Pine, is the most important pine in Japanese culture and one of the most striking conifers available to western growers. Its dense, dark needles, dramatically textured bark, and naturally irregular growth habit make it the defining pine of Japanese gardens, coastal landscapes, and bonsai collections worldwide. Hardy, adaptable, and highly tolerant of salt spray and wind, it has proven itself in the most exposed coastal conditions imaginable. Seed-grown specimens develop the natural character and variation that grafted nursery trees rarely achieve. If you are looking to buy Japanese Black Pine seeds or grow this pine from seed, you are beginning a relationship with a tree that rewards patience and attention over decades.

  • Dramatic dark needles and irregular growth habit prized in Japanese garden design for centuries
  • Exceptionally salt-tolerant, one of the best conifers for coastal planting and seaside windbreaks
  • The most widely used pine species in traditional bonsai cultivation worldwide
  • Naturally develops rugged, textured bark with character that takes decades to achieve in other species
  • Adaptable to poor, sandy, or rocky soils and highly exposed sites

Things you probably did not know about the Japanese Black Pine

It is the pine that defines the Japanese coastline.
Groves of Japanese Black Pine planted along the Japanese coast over centuries serve as windbreaks protecting villages and rice fields from typhoon winds and salt spray. The silhouette of windswept Black Pines against a gray sea is one of the most recognized images in Japanese art and landscape painting.

Bonsai masters spend entire careers on a single tree.
Japanese Black Pine bonsai require specific summer and winter care techniques that have been refined and passed down through generations of practitioners. A well-developed Black Pine bonsai represents hundreds of hours of accumulated skill and is among the most respected art forms in Japanese culture. Some specimens in major collections are over 200 years old.

It hybridizes naturally with other pines.
Japanese Black Pine crosses readily with Japanese Red Pine to produce Pinus densiflora x thunbergii, a hybrid sometimes used in coastal plantings. Seed-grown specimens from wild-collected seeds occasionally show hybrid characteristics, adding to the natural variation that makes growing from seed rewarding.

The candles are a key feature in bonsai technique.
The new spring growth of Japanese Black Pine emerges as elongated buds called candles. Bonsai practitioners remove or cut these candles at precise times to control growth, ramification, and needle length. Mastering candle work is considered one of the foundational skills of pine bonsai.

Growing Details

  • Botanical Name: Pinus thunbergii
  • Stratification: Recommended, 30 to 60 days cold stratification
  • USDA Zones: 5 to 9
  • Soil: Well-drained, sandy, tolerates poor and rocky soils
  • Light: Full sun
  • Height: 20 to 80 feet depending on conditions
  • Spread: 20 to 40 feet
  • Growth Rate: Moderate, 1 to 2 feet per year

Grow it in the ground for a coastal windbreak or in a pot for a lifetime of creative engagement. Either way, this pine is a commitment worth making.

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Sailorman
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
Great speculation from the "Alternative Camp"
Format: Paperback
According to John Anthony West it was not until the second half of the twentieth century that "guerilla scholarship" became a noticeable, if uncoordinated force in modern science. Guerilla scholarship of course, refers to the alternative camp or those that challenge orthodox views in science, archeology, anthropology, etc. If this book doesn't fall into the guerilla scholarship or alternative camp category it comes really close. Author Dr. Robert Schoch is of course the archeologist who some years ago, along with John Anthony West, shocked the scientific community and infuriated Dr. Zahi Hawass, Egypt's Director of Antiquity, by claiming that the Sphinx's construction predated Khufu, its alleged builder, by 3,000 years or more. While the controversy surrounding those claims has resulted in numerous books, both, pro and con, with no real accepted conclusions, in this book Schoch tries to develop the hypothesis that all of the pyramids constructed around the world have a common origin in Sundaland, which was inundated under 250 feet of water after the last ice age. If somebody could come across a pyramid or two (2), that predated the great pyramid, under that 250 feet of water it would certainly help Schoch's case, but be that as it may, Schoch, while not proving his hypothesis, does present a pretty convincing argument in support of his speculation. Schoch begins with a discussion in review of the theories for the age of Giza and other pyramid type structures around the world. He then provides very convincing evidence for his claim that humans traversed both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans eons before Columbus's 1492 voyage, which is the orthodox view of the first contact with the new world. He discusses how early humans might have accomplished this as well as their possible motives for doing so. Schoch concludes with where they came from, arriving at the common roots in Sundaland 10,000 years ago. This book probably has some of the longest, impossible to pronounce names, of people and places of any book that I have ever read; and a few maps of various parts of the world, particularly Europe, the Middle and Far East, and South America, would have helped a great deal in developing a mental picture of what was being related. All that aside, the book challenges the mind and causes one to think. I was particularly intrigued by Schoch's explanation as to how Moses was able to convince the pharaoh to allow him and his followers to leave Egypt, as well as Schoch's perfectly plausible explanation of what parted the waters of the Red Sea and subsequently drowned the pharaoh's army when the waters rushed back in. While maybe not as convincing as Schoch's earlier work, "Voices of the Rocks", Schoch presents convincing arguments and if you are a "guerilla scholar" you're going to love this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2008
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K. Ryan Kane
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
This is a great book to begin your study on all the groups ...
Format: Paperback
This book isn't just about pyramids. It talks a lot about all the different groups and waves of people who traveled to the American continent, mostly the Latin American areas. There is so much information contained therein that I intend to read this book again. This is a great book to begin your study on all the groups who traveled to Latin America.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2018
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Robert R.
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Good read
Format: Kindle
Very well written, personable, and good research. Several references were made about Noah and Moses as if they were valid historical people and their related events, which most scholars agree were 'lifted' from Sumerian and Akkadian legends. Doesn't give much credit to Zechariah Sitchin, never even mentions Enlil and Enki - it's like talking about Kennedy's last trip to Dallas without mentioning the Grassy Knoll.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2015
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Amazon Customer
New York, US
★★★★★ 3
Interesting
Format: Hardcover
Great perspective and well-presented discussion. Beneficial for contemplation and developing hypotheses or questioning documented science to further discern evidence or seek new explanations. Recommend reading through a lens of correlation does not equal causation.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2026
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Karla Crum
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Professional and fun to read
Format: Paperback
The book is written by a professional who provides ideas and reasons about possibilities without being dogmatic.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2022

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