male and female flowers bore separately as small cones on the same plant,
Fruit
cones 2 inches long by 1-2 inches broad
Leaves
needles: green, lustrous, two in a bundle, soft, snapped when bent, 5-6 inches long
Stems
bark: narrow ridges, gray flacking to red-brown
Dimensions
50-80 feet tall
Propagation
seeds
Misc Facts
Red pine comes from the reddish color of the bark, hard pine from when it was compared to White Pine (often grows and harvested with White Pine) and Norway from a mistaken identity by early explores with the Norway Spruce (this is one of many theories on why this name occurred.
Author's Notes
I don't know how much this conifer is used in the landscape. I checked three major nurseries in the SE Wisconsin region and none ofter this plant for sale.
Notes & Reference
#1-Manual of Woody Landscape Plants (Michael Dirr),#39-The Natural History of Trees (Donald Cultrose Pattie) #66-Trees of Eastern and North central USA and Canada (Harlow), #93-North American Landscape Trees (Arthur Lee Jacobson), #94-Trees of Eastern and Central United States and Canada