Pinus koraiensis

Silveray Korean Stone Pine can start producing cones/pine nuts when five feet tall. In ten years the tree should be eight feet tall and four feet wide. At 25 years height should be thirty feet tall and ten to fifteen feet wide. It takes two different Korean pines to produce nuts. Plant in full sun in zones 4-8. This five needle pine has silver, blue and green colored needles at the same time. Silveray has year round interest. A fairly compact "soft" foliage evergreen. Space 15' circle. Choose Morris Blue as a pollinator

Plant Characteristics
Pest Resistance Excellent
Disease Resistance Excellent
Drought Tolerance Very Good
Heat Tolerance Excellent
Humidity Tolerance Excellent
Sun Tolerance Excellent
Wet Soil Tolerance Poor
Shade Tolerance Fair
No Spray Excellent
Salt Tolerance Poor
Fresh for Kids Excellent
Deer Resistance Fair
Thorns No
Plant Type Tree
Soil Type Well Drained
Edible Type Nut
Self Fertile Use Morris Blue
This information is accurate to the best of our knowledge, comments/opinions are always welcome

Due to import restrictions we are unable to ship Silveray Korean Stone Pine to CA...

Pine Care Guide



Pine nuts trees like Pinus pinea, commonly known as Italian Stone Pine are like other pines in their care, easy to maintain. The three main things to remember for best performance are full sun, good drainage and normal to poor soil.

Italian Stone pine has juvenile blue spruce like needles at first. Needles after the first season are much longer and greener. Native to areas like Italy they enjoy hot dry summers and mild winters. Northern climate boundaries on the East coast would end somewhere between Washington DC and Baltimore MD. They are best grown in zones
7 - 9.

Keep weeds and grass away from the developing tree. As soon as it reaches a height of approximately 8', it will start to umbrella out. A very interesting form for a pine, hence its nickname, Umbrella Pine.

This is the tree that Pignola nuts come from. Be patient or plant the tree for the children, because the nuts are part of the pine cones and they may take up to 15 years to start producing the cones. They may be erratic and not automatic after they do start producing.

The nuts are the reward. I've noticed they taste far fresher than store bought nuts. It's a noticeable difference. Nuts do need to be hulled. The shell needs to be cracked off. Commercially this is done with a hammer mill. If growing your own catches on maybe we can design a kitchen model hammer mill.

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