Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Young, healthy Japanese pines were planted here because they were supposedly "hardy."
Enveloped by Japanese pines and maples, it is picture-perfect all year round.
Weldon grabbed at her arm, but she shook free and headed for the Japanese pines back of the cottage.
Their favorite trees are Scots pine, Red pine, Jack pine, and Japanese pines.
The house is perched on a hillside overlooking Richmondtown, S.I.; the site, three-quarters of an acre, is planted with Japanese pines.
The Arboretum features over 40 species of mature trees including Japanese pines, Mediterranean cedars, redwoods, and other trees native to the Pacific Northwest.
Designed by landscape architect Shogo Myaida, the garden combines native and Japanese plants including Japanese pines, Colorado blue spruce, maples, azaleas, and false cypress.
"Edie thinks it's thriving because it can't get that disease up here," Ham said, referring to the fungus-ridden Japanese turpentine beetle that has hit Japanese pines in the East.
The Japanese Black Pine is also known as the Japanese Pine, Black Pine, and (in Japanese language) Kuromatsu (黒松).
He shoveled down the egg and bread standing at the kitchen window, watching the gray-shingled houses across the street melt from the darkness, shadowy clumps resolving into thickets of bayberry and sheep laurel, a picket line of Japanese pines beyond them.
On this day, it was utterly deserted, a milelong stretch of white sand bordered by high dunes and maritime forest, a tough-looking expanse of gnarled Japanese pines, holly bushes, cottonwoods, bayberry, quaking aspens and Virginia creepers, with bright red stems and clusters of blue berries.
In Japan it is most commonly associated with Japanese Red Pine.
Pinus densiflora 'Umbraculifera', (Dwarf Japanese Red Pine)
In has been introduced into Japan and China, where it has become a troubling disease of Japanese red pines (Pinus densiflora) and black pines (Pinus thunbergii).
Forestry in the surrounding hills comprises trees such as the Japanese red pine (pinus densiflora).
Pinus densiflora dominates coniferous forests across North Korea, and has also increased in abundance in areas altered by human impact.
Tree: Red pine tree (Pinus densiflora)
The Tanyosho pine is a cultivar of the Japanese red pine (Pinus densiflora) and known for its umbrellalike growth habit.
Pinus densiflora 'Umbraculifera', (Dwarf Japanese Red Pine)
Situated on the windiest corner of his L-shaped space, much like an exclamation point, is an evergreen topiary Tanyosho pine (Pinus densiflora Umbraculifera).
We worshiped first in the grove of six Tanyosho pines (Pinus densiflora Umbraculifera), whose multi stemmed trunks were flaming orange-red in the late afternoon light.
In has been introduced into Japan and China, where it has become a troubling disease of Japanese red pines (Pinus densiflora) and black pines (Pinus thunbergii).
Subspecies koraiensis can be found on Pinus koraiensis, Pinus densiflora, Pinus strobus and Pinus pumila.
The garden includes 13 hectares of natural forest which consists mainly of Abies firma and Pinus densiflora, and broad-leaf evergreens such as Quercus glauca and Castanopsis cuspidata var.
At Oliver Nursery in Fairfield, Conn., Scott Jamison, the owner, said the staff particularly enjoyed plants like the golden-hued Dragon's Eye pine (Pinus densiflora Oculus Draconis), a relatively slow grower that has long, yellow-banded needles.
On to a conifer at Wave Hill that left no question as to its identity: a Japanesse umbrella pine (Pinus densiflora Umbraculifera) with long soft needles, clustered in twos, and flaky bark mottled in shades of pink, mustard, gray and olive.
Wander through any arboretum worth its salt and you will smell the resin of the world's great conifer forests, with Pinus densiflora, Cryptomeria japonica and Chamaecyparis obtusa from Japan and Pinus ponderosa, Thuja plicata and Pseudotsuga menziesii from western North America.