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Longleaf Pine

Pinus palustris
As low as $99.94
In stock
SKU
PFY-1191220002

Longleaf Pine Valuable Timber, Historical Legacy

  • Important, Attractive, Easy Care Native Tree
  • Extremely Long, Soft, Weeping Needles
  • Highly Textured, Colorful Bark
  • Wildlife Tree Brings Turkey, Pheasant and Bobwhite Quail
  • Valuable for Timber and Pine Straw Mulch
  • Install Plantations for your Great Grandchildren
  • Grow Fluffy Young Grass Stage Trees in Large Containers for Years
  • Incredible Visual Screen as Border Along Your Property Line
  • Shows Resistance to Pine Tip Moth & Southern Pine Beetle
  • Drought and Salt Resistant

The magnificent Longleaf Pine Tree (Pinus palustris) remains a vitally important resource for family forest owners throughout the Southeast. They provide saw timber and pine straw mulch that brings enormous value.

Our growers take special pride in producing top quality plants for your property. After all, a well-managed plantation or stand of Longleaf Pines can supply family income for your grandchildren and great-children.

Mature trees have an incredibly straight trunk with limbs that start about 50 feet high off the ground. They are heavy, resist rot and termite damage and make perfect power line and telephone poles.

The straight trunk is covered in a blocky, textured bark that is brown with warm, orange overtones. It brings a big visual presence to the landscape.

Stick-straight Longleaf Pine trunks have also been known to tempt agile young human "climbers", who shimmy up the long length and then blissfully ride the branches as the soft-textured canopy sways back and forth in the slightest breeze. (But you never did anything like that, did you?)

Incredibly long, dark green needles hold on the tree over 2 growing seasons, then fall to the ground as pine straw mulch. Gardeners throughout the South love using pine straw to mulch their flower beds. This valuable wood product can be baled, processed and sold with proper state certification.

Under optimal conditions, Longleaf Pine can grow to be very tall and live for hundreds of years. New growth buds appear silvery white and are particularly attractive in the winter landscape.

The Importance of Longleaf Pine Trees

Native Longleaf Pine forests once covered 92 million acres of coastal plain in the Southeastern United States. Overharvesting the old growth and recent short-sighted clear cutting practices have caused a devastating loss of habitat in excess of 97% of presettlement range.

But today, this beautiful tall tree is making a comeback. This is thanks to the hard work of restoration groups who are replanting ancient Longleaf Pine regions.

There is nothing so restful and soothing to the soul like a properly managed Pine Savannah. Filtered sunlight breaks through the trees canopy allowing for the cultivation of grasses and sedges and other perennial plant to grow under their canopies. Native wildflowers thrive underneath their filtered shade, as do architectural sweeps of native Wiregrass.

The pine cones are 10 inches long and the seeds feed pheasant, turkey, quail and squirrel. Of course, Longleaf Pine is also a friend to a wide web of native animals, including the red-cockaded woodpecker, brown headed nuthatch, harmless indigo snake and gopher tortoise.

Start your legacy. Order Longleaf Pines from LetsPlantify.com today.

How to Use Longleaf Pine in the Landscape

Understand the goals for your property to maximize earning potential from logging. Forestry experts are now recommending an uneven aged management approach to forests, with a mix of young and old trees to allow a continuous stream of income from timber every 7 to 12 years and a higher net income.

Restoring previously cleared land is a worthwhile effort. Add Longleaf Pine as a long-term species in a diversified reforestation effort. Faster growing trees can be strategically added, then removed for cut timber first as they reach goal. Allow the more valuable Longleaf Pine trees to mature and provide a seed source.

There are other ways to use this valuable tree, as well. A beautiful border of Longleaf Pines marching along the length of a property line make a wonderful visual screen. You'll love the way these highly textured trees look when planted in a very formal way.

Plant them 6 feet apart on center, measuring from the center of one to the center of the next. This spacing gives you and your family a welcome sense of separation from neighboring properties.

Young Longleaf Pines are so cute. They might remind you of that old cartoon, "Captain Caveman" as they go through a fluffy grass phase before the trunk expands to push the canopy high up in the air.

These shaggy baby trees have so much character, with long, weeping needles growing in soft-bristled tufts at the tips of the branches. Why not try a few as a focal point in a series of large containers for several years?

They would be a fun, short-term accent with a wonderfully casual look. Use them as an effective, memorable privacy screen for a few years, then sell them, transplant them or donate to a local restoration project.

#ProPlantTips for Care

Recommended for larger landscapes, parks and woodland restoration, Longleaf Pine trees are also known as Southern Yellow Pine and Pitch Pine. They produce pitch, which has been used as tar, resin and turpentine.

They should be planted at least 100 yards away from structures as a precaution to prevent fire damage in your defensible space.

Periodic, smoldering slow fires have been part and parcel of the Southern Piney Woods for eons. Controlled burns are now recommended as a part of proper stand management. Work with your state forestry commission office for help finding professionals who are versed in prescribed burning using proper scientific methods. Controlled burns rejuvenate your soil and clear competing brush out of the woods.

Our top-rated, field grown plants are securely packaged and shipped directly to your door. Give your trees a planting site in well-drained soil in full sun for best results.

In their grass phase, they work to establish their root systems in your native soil before much upward growth is noticed. As it matures, it becomes a stately, low-maintenance tree. It's even self-pruning, with the trunk eventually soaring upward straight and true.

Order Longleaf Pine from LetsPlantify.com today.

More Information
Botanical Name Pinus palustris
Mature Height 80 - 100 feet
Mature Spread 30 - 40 feet
Soil Type Well Drained
Moisture Moderate
Sun Exposure Full Sun
Growth Rate Slow
Foliage Color Green
Fall Color Evergreen
Pollinator Required No
Pollinator Friendly No
Growing Zone Range 7-9
Longleaf Pine Is Suited to Grow in Zones 7-9
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