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PINYON
PINE - Pine Family
Pinus
edulis
Pinyon Pine is the only short needle pine that grows in the Kaibab Forest
of the South Rim. Both Douglas fir and white fir also have short needles
but they grow only below the South Rim on shady north-facing cliffs.
Pinyon needles are about 1½ inches long. The tree averages 20 to
30 feet tall. The bark is rough; it is gray or black in color and occasionally
covered with lichens. The trunk is crooked and branching, not straight
like the ponderosa and firs. Cones are small and stubby, about 2 to 3 inches.
The seeds, called pinyon nuts or pine nuts, are kidney bean-sized and delicious.
A bumper crop of pinyon nuts can be expected about every 3 to 6 years.
2004 is a bumper crop year. The pinyon reaches 400 years in age.
For thousands of years, the pinyon has enjoyed a symbiotic relationship
with the pinyon jay. The jay collects pinyon nuts and buries them for the
winter. Although the jay has a marvelous memory for its caches, remembering
up to 1,000 caches, any nuts that are not recovered may grow into new trees. |