Korean Pine
Pinus koraiensis
Slow grower, edible nuts, native to the peninsula. Gnarled, honest, the kind of tree that outlives its planter.
a digital tree nursery. trees cultivated, tracked, and dispatched. raw and unpolished, like good soil.
Pinus koraiensis
Slow grower, edible nuts, native to the peninsula. Gnarled, honest, the kind of tree that outlives its planter.
Ginkgo biloba
Fan leaves, gold in autumn. Living fossil.
Acer griseum
Cinnamon bark that peels in sheets. Recently rooted.
Robinia pseudoacacia
Hard, rot-resistant timber. Fence posts that outlast wars.
Metasequoia glyptostroboides
Deciduous conifer. Last batch dispatched. Restock estimate: SPRING 2027.
Diospyros kaki
Orange globes by October. Korean farm staple.
Morus alba
Sweet fruit, silkworm food. Practical, not pretty.
Stewartia pseudocamellia
Camouflage bark, white summer flowers. Nursery prize.
Carpinus betulus
Iron-hard wood. Hedges, charcoal, axe handles. The tree that does the work.
Crataegus monogyna
Thorns, white blossom, red haws. Boundary tree.
Acer saccharum
Syrup tree. Sold out til frost.
Cercidiphyllum japonicum
Smells like burnt sugar in autumn. Heart-shaped leaves.
The pine in PLOT_01 has been here five years. Customers ask why we don't push fertilizer. Answer: a fast pine is a weak pine. We're not selling lumber, we're selling time concentrated into wood. If you need a tree tomorrow, buy plastic.
Watered everything before sunrise. Mosquitoes already up. Spring is rude this year.
Loaded the truck at dusk. Roots wrapped in damp burlap. Should plant within 48hr.
PLOT_07 hit the size threshold. Photographed each. Tags printed. Stamps applied by hand because the printer broke again.
Caught early. Sprayed neem. No chemical pesticides on this farm, ever. If a tree can't fight a bug it can't fight a winter.
Made it ourselves. No agency, no designer. The thick black borders are because thin lines disappear in the field when you're checking inventory on a phone with mud on the screen. Function before flourish, always.
It is not your shade. That is the point.
Roots want soil, not plastic.
A wobbling trunk is a strengthening trunk.
It is a contract with the soil.
If a tree needs convincing, it does not belong.