<h2>PLATE XVII<br/> THE SCOTCH PINE OR SCOTCH FIR</h2>
<p>The Scotch Pine (1), or, as it is often called by
mistake, the Scotch Fir, is one of our noblest
trees; it is tall, and rugged, and sturdy, with a
beauty which lies in its strength and dignity rather
than in its grace. In bygone days large tracts
of Scotland were clothed with vast forests of
Scotch Pine, under whose gloomy branches many
wolves roamed and the wild deer wandered in
herds. But the owners of these noble forests cut
down the trees to get money for the timber, and
the wolves have disappeared. There is now only
a scanty remnant of the great army of Pine trees
which once clothed the northern lands of Britain.</p>
<p>Those vast forests were not planted by man.
The young trees sprang from seeds which had
fallen from the woody fruit cones, and were
carried by rooks or other birds to places where
human beings rarely trod. There the young
seeds grew and sent out their greedy roots. If
the soil was good and plentiful they produced a
strong carrot-shaped root, which bored deep into
the ground and gave the tree such a firm hold
that no storm could tear it up. But if the ground
had only a little earth on the surface and there
were hard rocks beneath, then the roots crept
like serpents near the surface of the soil, clasping
the rocks with a tight grip to steady the tree.</p>
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<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate17"><span class="smcap">Plate XVII</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_119.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE SCOTCH PINE<br/>
1. Scotch Pine Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Needles</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower</span><span class="gap">4. Seed Flower (pink cones)</span><br/>
5. Green Cones<span class="gap">6. Grey Cone</span><span class="gap">7. Seed with Wing</span></p>
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<p>How the wind roars in the Pine branches on
the high mountain lands! It is like the sound
of the sea. If the Pine tree had broad leaves,
such as the Sycamore or the Lime tree, it would
soon be blown down; but the storm gusts pass
through its fine needle-leaves, and no harm is
done.</p>
<p>The trunk of the Scotch Pine is very rough,
and it is covered with rugged pieces of reddish
bark, separated from each other by deep furrows.
It rises to a great height, throwing out many
large branches on each side, and there is always
a bushy rounded tree-top looking up to the sky.
In a Pine forest the lower part of the tree is
usually bare. This is because the trees are
planted so close together there is little air except
near the top of the tree, and the lower branches
are stifled.</p>
<p>Beneath the branches the ground is always
carpeted with fallen Pine leaves, and very curious
these Pine leaves (2) are. They look like green
needles with soft blunt points, and the edges of
each needle are rolled back so that the leaf appears
round above and is boat-shaped below.
The under-side of the needle is much lighter in
colour than the dark green surface.</p>
<p>These needle-leaves usually grow in pairs,
though you may find a bunch containing three or
even four needles; they are held together by a
thin grey sheath, which looks like paper and
clasps the end of the bunch. These needle-bunches
are placed all round the twig, close together,
so as to form a dense brush. They remain
on the tree for two or three years, then they fall;
but their work is not done. Very often the Pine
tree seed has been carried to some sandy sea-shore
upon which nothing is willing to grow. There it
takes root and flourishes, and in course of time it
throws down handfuls of withered needle-leaves on
the loose sandy ground. These needles decay and
form a bed of soil which binds the sand together,
and when the wind and the birds bring other
seeds, they find a place in which they can take
root and grow. In France great tracts of waste
land have become valuable in this way through
the planting of Pine trees.</p>
<p>The Pine tree has its flowers in catkins and
its fruit in cones. The catkins are of two kinds,
and they grow on the same tree, sometimes on
the same branch. The stamen flowers (3) are
found in dense spikes at the end of last year’s
bushy twig. They look like a cluster of bunches
of small yellow grains from which a tuft of fine
green spears rises in the centre. These grains
are the stamen heads, and in May and June they
send out clouds of fine yellow powder, which floats
in the air and settles on the leaves and on the
grass and on the margins of lakes and rivers,
where you can see little patches of it lying.
Country peasants sometimes tell you that this
yellow powder is sulphur which has fallen from
the sky during a thunder-storm!</p>
<p>The seed flowers (4) of the Pine tree are very
different. They grow either singly or in pairs at
the end of this year’s new twig, and at first they
are tiny pale pink cones. These cones are egg-shaped,
and are made up of scales tightly pressed
together, with little hard dots showing at the tip
of each scale. The seeds are behind the scales,
but you will not see them for a long time, as the
cone takes eighteen months to grow up. At the
end of the first summer you find that the pink
cone has become a rich green colour (5) and is
still soft, but when the second summer comes
round, the cone is ash-grey in colour (6) and is
hard and woody.</p>
<p>When the seeds are ripe the tightly-pressed
scales unclose and curl up, showing thick wooden
lips; at the base of each scale lie two white seeds,
and each seed (7) has a thin filmy wing. When
the seeds fall from the cone they are blown long
distances, floating on the air by their filmy wings.</p>
<p>There is a bird called the crossbill which is
very fond of Pine seeds, and very clever at picking
them out of the half-opened cones.</p>
<p>You will occasionally find a tree, very similar to
the Scotch Pine, in which the cones grow in
groups of three or four together at the end of the
twigs. This tree is called the Cluster Pine, and
you will notice that its bunches of leaves are
different in colour: they are a bluey green, and
the tips of the needles are yellowish, as if they
had begun to wither.</p>
<p>The wood of the Pine tree is very valuable.
Thousands of pounds were paid for the trees in
the old Scotch forests, and many stout ships were
built from their sturdy trunks. Besides the good
timber, the Pine tree gives us turpentine and
resin from its juice. If you cut a hole in a Pine
tree stem a thick juice will soon be seen oozing
from this hole, and it quickly hardens into a clear
gum.</p>
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