Cones White
I can not identify the pines growing on my land. Any person "well informed evergreen?
I searched the web again and again and not I can find a serious in-depth site. I think my trees are a type of white pine long, soft, light green needles and branches that break easily under the weight ice or snow. The bark is gray and the sap is white. The cones are slender-4 to 8 inches long. At this time, the trees are approximately 20 years and 10 to 15 feet. In the fall, some of the needles turn brown and blanket the ground below the trees. As a matter of fact, in the thickest clumps of trees, the ground is a soft carpet of needles that have fallen in recent years. I have yet to find this tree in the line.
It sounds like a white pine but the best way to start is to drop the packet id needle mother and count How Many are in the package. White pine is a five-needle pine, black pine is two, and so on. If not found in the packages, look for another conifer, such as spruce or pine. Larch and dawn redwood are the conifers that drop all their needles in the fall, so if you are saying that all the needles fall, look for the deciduous conifer. It is difficult without a picture or a sample to identify trees evergreen, so you have to do a little detective work. Not a good site that helps you in the top left corner is a dropdown menu with gymnosperms (Conifers) families. Start with Pinaceae (pine family) and go from there. Site link: Good luck http://www.conifers.org
