![]() The young, light yellowish green cones might be missed with casual observation, but by looking closely, one may find a treasure of small, highly detailed cones among the upper branches of even young trees. With young cones ranging in colors from scarlet red, to dark blue and purple, to yellowish green, and with their assortment of sizes and shapes, I want to be sure to discover every one in my garden.Ībies koreana ‘Horstmann’s Silberlocke’ is one conifer that sets its cones prolifically in the spring. With all that going on, it can be easy to miss the early cone development stages of some of my conifers. Most of my attention is drawn by the new foliage on my conifers and Japanese maples, as well as the various flowering bulbs and perennials that begin their show in spring. ![]() The beauty of fresh new conifer foliage is a wonderful highlight to the garden in spring. Springtime is great because all the plants in my garden begin to wake up after their winter’s nap and show new life. One of the reasons I love conifers so much is the grand assortment of cones that are borne on their branches. ![]() I look forward to the next several weeks as the hunt will continue and I will discover more and more tiny treasures throughout my garden. As they mature and begin to elongate a little further, their color takes on some hints of yellow and red suggesting a tinge of orange before they fully open, empty themselves of pollen, and then dry and fade away after completing their important reproductive function. Pinus mugo 'Big Tuna' is a great, compact, upright form with rich green foliage and colorful pollen cones.Īnother favorite discovery right now is the colorful pollen cones of Pinus mugo ‘Big Tuna’ with their purplish tightly closed pockets of pollen awaiting just the right conditions to open and begin to disperse their fertile pollen into the air. The female cones will develop and mature for the next few months, becoming larger and slowly morphing from a spiraling column of reddish-pink pointed wings to a gradient of muted yellowish-green to pink stack of wings on an ever thickening body. The seed cones begin to develop shortly after the pollen cones and just prior to their spring flush of new foliage. I love the cone development on my Abies koreana ‘Blauer Pfiff’. Take a strong magnifying lens or your camera with a quality macro mode, and you just might be surprised at the wonders you will discover. One of it's wonderful features is that is seems to cone at a fairly young age.īut don’t let that stop you from getting out into your garden and taking a close look at your conifers. No doubt, for whatever reason, last year was an extraordinary year for the cone hunter! Abies koreana 'Blauer Pfiff' is a wonderful, low-growing form of Korean fir. I asked my friends at Iseli what they were seeing this year, and their observation is very much like my own. It is still early, but by this time last year I was seeing more cone developement on more species and cultivars than I had ever seen in one season before. Both my garden and the gardens and production fields at Iseli showed an abundance of cones like I’ve never seen before. I believe that last year was an especially good year for cone production on the conifers in my area. This year is definitely proving to be a week or two behind last year when it comes to my conifers beginning their spring flush of new growth and their display of male pollen cones and the female seed cones. I must still be a kid at heart, playing a horticultural version of hide and seek, because I love looking for those colorful little signs that springtime has arrived. You may recall from past posts how much I enjoy the hunt for the first signs of tiny cones beginning to develop on my conifers.
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