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prairie_gal_z2b

Vanderwolf's Pine

prairie_gal_z2b
16 years ago

Hi all,

I was wondering if any of you has tried this pine and how it does for you. I ended up with 2 last year, one small one and another 4 foot one, and they looked fine all winter. I saw them today and they're now looking pretty sad. About 1/2 of the needles are turning a light yellow color, and after some research I found out that it's not Pinus flexilis at all but P. reflexa, which is way less hardy.

They might already be dead, but I'll keep my fingers crossed that they might recover...Anyone try this one?

Thanks!

Koren

Comments (8)

  • Konrad___far_north
    16 years ago

    We will find out that it was one of the toughest winter for a long time for tender plants,
    especially for the first winter and zone 4 rating cultivars.
    Not sure if this was grafted to a hardier cultivar,...as I was reading, some sell them grafted.
    Sun scalding is especially bad for the first couple of winters,.. what I have done with my Spruce and
    Pine in the fall, sprayed with a latex water mix for reflection of sun ray, this seemed to help them when small.
    You can also cover them with burlap or block the sunlight from the south with some means of temporary fencing.
    Lets hope they will make it, perhaps they do if you had a good snow cover.
    Konrad

  • leftwood
    16 years ago

    I'm afraid you may have gone past the limits of hope with this one. Even here in USDA zone 4 Minnesota, 95% die.

  • prairie_gal_z2b
    Original Author
    16 years ago

    sigh.
    I better start looking for that warranty...

  • greenlove
    16 years ago

    I was desperate for a couple of pines and fell in love with these so brought home two. One died the first year, so I reluctantly replaced it with something else (not a pine). The 2nd one, in a lot more protected spot, is barely hanging on and will probably be taken out this year. I am so disappointed, especially as I rigorously quizzed the salesperson about them, never having seen them in Alberta before. Think I'll stick to a Scots pine.
    Kate

  • Sherwood Botsford (z3, Alberta)
    15 years ago

    Oh come now, you have LOTS of options besides scots:
    Natively there are lodgepole and jack. If scots pine
    goes for soccer, then lodgepole goes out for basketball.
    Jack is the wild one -- can look like a giant bonsai.

    We can also grow ponderosa, whitebark (very hard to find)
    and limber pine natively.

    Other possibilities: Bosnian Pine, Swiss Stone Pine, Eastern white pine (marginal) Red pine (similar to scots,
    but doesn't go as yellow in winter)

    Contact me by private message for specifics

  • Teresa0123
    11 years ago

    This is my second attempt on my Vanderwolf pines the first attempt my trees were not too large maybe 4 ft tall and they did fine for the first couple months and then turned completely brown and dry and we pulled them out. This year we bought much larger ones and planted them in different areas than last time. They were doing very well and are now starting to rapidly turn brown. I have pest control spray the yard because I thought that may help keep bugs away, we also have many small birds and it looks as if they are eating the buds off. I'm not sure if that would kill the tree or if it would be an insect. Any recommendations?

  • Konrad___far_north
    11 years ago

    Please, don't guess with spray's, most likely you experienced in both cases a transplant shock.
    If anything,...put them in smaller, a larger tree will have a harder time to adapt.

  • Teresa0123
    11 years ago

    Ok thanks, if they are in transplant shock and I think they are any recommendations for saving them? I checked the soil and it is moist so I am going to try cutting back on the watering a bit. But I want to keep the soil moist right?

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