Home > Catalogue > Cryptomeria japonica 'Globosa Nana' Globosa Nana
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Illustrative photo.
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Cryptomeria japonica 'Globosa Nana' Globosa Nana japanese cedar

size/type
low or groundcovering
usual height
1,5-1,8m
leaves
evergreen conifer
flowers
insignificant or non-blooming
blooming time
January-January
location
semi-shade / partial sun
winter protection
 
for zone 5+6
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 5+6
for zone 7
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 7
categorized

Cryptomeria

Cryptomeria is a genus of conifers in the cypress family with only a single living representative today, yet its story reaches far beyond the forests of modern Japan. Fossils show that its ancient relatives were already growing in the Early Cretaceous and that during the Tertiary they covered large areas of Eurasia and North America, forming humid, warm forests with high air moisture. The genus was described by the Scottish botanist David Don (1799–1841), who separated it from the then broad group of taxodia and gave it the form in which we know it today. Its only species, Cryptomeria japonica, comes from Japan, where it forms mountain forests on the islands of Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu. In the wild the species reaches impressive dimensions, up to around sixty metres in height, and its reddish brown bark peels in long strips, earning it comparisons with the sequoias, although it has finer needles and smaller cones.

The Japanese cedar entered European science thanks to the Swedish naturalist Carl Peter Thunberg (1743–1828), who described it at the end of the eighteenth century during his stay in what was then a closed Japan. While Don established the boundaries of the genus, Thunberg captured the species itself as he saw it in the Japanese landscape, forests wrapped in mist through which gentle shades of green flicker as light breaks and scatters across the branches, giving the stands an almost sacred appearance. It is no wonder that cryptomeria, known as sugi 杉 in Japan, gained such a strong place in local culture. The Japanese valued it not only for its wood, which is light, durable and pleasantly scented, but also for its calm, upright silhouette. They planted it around shrines as protection from wind and rain, and the famous avenues, for example at Nikko, still show how deep their relationship with the tree was. In everyday life it served as material for houses, baths and boats, but also as a monumental tree that reminds a person that he stands before something older and more enduring than himself.

Description of the plant

Many times heard that japanese cedar cannot withstand heavy frost? Try one to see for yourself. This beautiful, slow-growing, compact shrub is ideal not only for japanese style gardens. Dense
foliage (needles) turns brown or purplish in winter and thrives fresh green in spring again. The specimen in the picture is many years old, do not expect it to grow taller or wider than some 2,5m. Prefers partial shade and acid soil with a lot of moist. Do not let the soil dry out, water the plant even in winter in frost-free periods.

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