The stone pine (botanical name pinus pinea ) has been cultivated around the Mediterranean for at least six millennia and was introduced to Italy by the Greeks. As well as looking beautiful and providing much-needed shade, it is also the source of the pine nuts (pignoli ) used to make pesto and to garnish Italian salads, and according to Livy (writing at the tail-end of BC), the wood was used for ship-building, 'pinea ' thereby becoming an alternative word for ship.
A stone pine has a lifespan of between 50 and 150 years, so the task of maintaining and replanting a population over many centuries is a significant civic undertaking. Quite why it became so popular in Rome (now synonymous with and a recognised symbol of the capital), is not well documented, but the love affair is a deep and enduring one and these beautiful and striking trees have long been an integral part of the landscape and spirit of the place.
Rome's famous 'umbrella' trees |
Diseases of trees are nothing new. We've become accustomed to losing large numbers of trees to Dutch Elm disease, Ash dieback, Horse Chestnut canker and Plane wilt. The more connected the world becomes, the easier and quicker it is for contagions to spread (as we found with Covid-19). In fact the poor stone pine is suffering from another affliction as well, an earlier parasitic visitor from the USA, the western conifer seed bug (leptoglossus occidentalis ) which arrived in the 1990s and feeds on the sap of the developing pine cones, threatening not only Italy's pine nut industry but also the tree's ability to propagate itself.
Worrying though the advance of the conifer seed bug is, attention is now focussed on the threat being posed by the tortoise scale bug to Rome's famous 'umbrella' trees, for the voracious parasite is quite capable of killing off a stone pine in two or three years. Many of Rome's trees are suffering from the pest. An initial large-scale felling of infected trees caused an uproar and so a fund was set up to inoculate stone pines in the hope of stemming the parasite's advance, for the city would be robbed of much character if the trees all die off.
an integral part of the landscape |
Although mobilisation in this war between new world fauna and old world flora was hampered by the arrival of Covid, the associated lockdown, and what some see as typical Italian inefficiency, the fight to save the stone pines is well under way now. And as a back-up, operation Ossigeno (oxygen) is creating nurseries of thousands of new trees should the worst happen. Let us hope that Romans are not left pining for their loss.
I've written a few poems that take playful liberties with time and history (introducing cigars into ancient Greece, early radar into Roman Britain, making valentine cards available to stone-age Romeos et cetera ) and I've done it again with this latest from the imaginarium, ostensibly about planting trees in renaissance Italy. Enjoy.
I intend to plant a tree in my re-vamped Blackpool back garden next spring. It won't be anything as stunning as a stone pine. That would be too big and would look strangely out of place on its own. A fig or an olive tree is more likely, and if the climate in the jewel of the north remains mild over the next few years, I look forward to it prospering. I shall certainly take a leaf out of the new King's book and talk to it.
I've written a few poems that take playful liberties with time and history (introducing cigars into ancient Greece, early radar into Roman Britain, making valentine cards available to stone-age Romeos et cetera ) and I've done it again with this latest from the imaginarium, ostensibly about planting trees in renaissance Italy. Enjoy.
Cinquecento
Buonarroti's voice on the answerphone:
Do you want to do some ceiling Saturday?
Raffa hits delete, drops a couple of ice cubes
into his glass of red. They hiss and splinter
much like his head after long hours spent
trying to get Olimpia's breasts to look right.
He's no intention of spending this week-end
up a scaffold on his back thanks all the same,
on a better offer from his pal Sagnallo. Tony
lent him a hand to renovate the workshop so
now's time to return the favour helping plant
five hundred stone pine saplings for a Count.
Villa d'Este promises fresh air, a decent bed
and maybe the chance to rekindle his affair
with the flame-haired servant in the segreto.
Happy memories. If lucky, he could pick up
a commission. Another statue on the books
would see him comfortably through summer
and the Sistine Chapel isn't going anywhere.
Raffa swills down a slice of greasy pizza,
throws some clothes in a bag, lights a spliff,
climbs into his trusty marbled Cinquecento
and roars away into Rome's petrol dusk. If
he steps on it he'll make Tivoli by midnight.
beautiful and striking stone pines |
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
66 comments:
Love the poem.
Roman pines are amazing to look at. We visited in 2012. I was told lots of them had been planted on the orders of Mussolini. Surprised he wasn't hung from one. Another super blog and poem, well done. 👏
Very interesting about the plight of stone pines. I hope the cure works. What a poem!
Thank you for that. I live in Sicily and have only been to Rome for a day!!!
A fascinating read. I've seen those pine trees in lots of places in southern Italy. They are a lovely sight. I never realised they were specially planted all over Rome. Now excuse my cynicism but isn't it going to cost a hell of a lot more than €1 a tree to inoculate half a million of them against this parasite? As for the poem, fabulous. I wish I had your imagination.
Genius poem, la! 🍕🍕🍕
I googled Villa d'Este. It's a Tivoli. Why am I not surprised? 🤣
Was sad to read about those beautiful trees, but your poem restored a smile.
I was half-expecting Donatello and crew to make an appearance. Clever, teasing poetry and yes, a great shame about those Roman pines. I hope they can be saved. FYI London's plane trees are facing a similar parasitic threat (canker stain), but maybe they are not considered symbolic enough!
Rome is one place I'd really like to go. Sad to hear about the parasites but I loved your clever poem (and what is a segreto?) ❤️
Happily thriving for 2000 years and then a double-whammy. Invasion by not one but two vicious American parasites! What surprises me is that I'd been led to believe that parasites co-exist with their host in the interests of both parties surviving. I wonder why that's not the case with this tortoise scale thingy. Kudos for the highly original poem. 👏👏👏
Wow. Instructive blog about the pine trees (great photographs) but that poem is brilliant Steve.
Clever clever clever - wish I'd written Cinquecento!
A beautifully written take on theme. Great poem! 👍
A really interesting article. I've seen those trees in southern Italy, very distinctive. I liked the way you described what is happening as a "war between new world fauna and old world flora". Fingers crossed that the campaign to save the trees is successful. You'd think the American branch of the mafia might contribute to the fund ;D
Now I want to go to Rome. Great blog, ingenious poem.👏
Cowabunga dude!😂
Reading that made me nostalgic for Rome. We went there on our honeymoon. I can't say I remember the trees especially but I was sad to hear about what is happening to them. I absolutely love your latest poem.
Fascinating reportage Steve. I would be majorly pissed off if pesto were to disappear as a result of parasites in the pine trees. I loved your ingenious poem. 💚
Thanks for this. I didn't realise the umbrella pine was a symbol of Rome, but they are in nearly every picture you see of the city.
Well done Steve. Keep taking imaginative liberties with time and history, the results are never less than inspired. 👏
I enjoyed your poem. Very creative. As for Roman pines, well maybe the new fascist prime minister of Italy will plant a whole lot more (just like Mussolini back in the early 1930s). And if the country's pine kernel harvests are failing, be sure China will fill the gap in the market.
A fascinating blog and a super poem.
It is very sad.
They are magnificent trees and would be a great loss. I loved your poem.
"Have pity on the city, man it's in trouble!" - shout out to Turtle Power! 😂 😂 😂
Fabulous poem, so many great lines. Lives of the Artists! 🤣
I love your blogs! 👏
An excellent post. Earthworld is an evolving battlefield. One day the parasites will go too far! Loved the ingenious poem mate.
Such a fascinating read. The trees are beautiful and I love the poem. ❤️
Thanks for sharing Steve. The poem works for me. Very well done.
"Do you want to do some ceiling Saturday?" Hilarious, I love it. What a great idea for a poem. Sorry to hear about Rome's pines though.
I love this blog and esp. your Cinquecento poem Steve. First class. I'm supposing that's the original Tivoli garden.
You knocked it out of the park with the poem. (Or should I say renaissance park? LOL) Sorry to read that my country is the cause of the stone pine plague.
What a great blog and poem. Well done Steve.
It is a shame about those beautiful and iconic trees. I love the way you've built an intriguing poem around "helping plant five hundred stone pine saplings". Cinquecento is an inspired leap of imagination. 👏
Cinquecento - really very good. 👍
I can only echo others. A shame about the trees but really well done with the poem.
A fascinating read. I love the clever poem. Thanks for the share.
Half a million stone pines is a lot of trees! What a drastic change if they all had to be chopped down! Good luck project Oxygen. I loved the poem, clever and amusing.
What a lovely, caring post topped off with a cracking poem. Thoroughly entertaining. 👏
What a fascinating article. Thank you Steve. It was all completely new to me.
And a splendid poem. The imaginarium working overtime.
Brilliant!
What a fascinating post. I've seen those umbrella trees in southern Italy. Such a shame. However, I loved your clever poem. Brilliantly done.
Informative, entertaining and such a clever poem. I loved it.
Simply great writing and a beautifully inventive poem. Class!
A fascinating post and a really entertaining poem.
Loved the poem, man.
It's a shame the pine trees are threatened by parasites, and for once climate change isn't the villain. I loved your poem, so witty. ❤️
Lovely trees, such a shame. I hope the remedy works. As for Cinquecento - LOL, brilliant stuff.🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕
I love Rome. Your news about the trees saddened me - hope they survive. I thought your poem was very clever. 👏
Of course I know the Tivoli Gardens are in Copenhagen (I've been there) and you can't drive from Rome to Copenhagen in an evening! But then I discovered that Copenhagen had named its park after the original near Rome... all power to your blog which educates as well as entertains. I had to look up segreto as well. So now I'm up to speed (LOL). And what a brilliant poem. Top marks sir.
I'm pleased this eco-blog and poem have gone over so well. Apparently the city of Rome has injected all of the 55,000 pine trees within its jurisdiction but the balance of the 300,000 are on private lands or owned by other agencies and their fate is either sealed or undetermined. Some 20,000 trees are already dead and being felled.
Just FYI, Tivoli near Rome was the original renaissance garden. Jardin du Tivoli was created in Paris as a copy and the Copenhagen Tivoli was in fact named after the French one (not the Italian).
Thanks everyone for the great comments. The poem will appear in my second collection at some point.
Fascinating post and what a fun poem.
A slice of pizza and glass of wine to you, Mr R. Well-deserved, too. 👏
Great post, beautifully written, instructive and that's one hell of a poem. I loved it.
An interesting insight into how vulnerable we are when so easily connected globally (and diseases spread with little time for resistance to develop). That flight of fancy of a poem is priceless, well done!
I'm impressed by the fact that Romans have been replacing their population of umbrella pines every hundred years or so for two millennia. That is quite something, as is your clever Cinquecento. Brilliant blogging and poetry.
A commendably readable piece about Rome's endangered pine trees and an audaciously amusing poem.
Fascinating reportage on those Roman pines and I loved the poem.
That poem's a belter! 👏
Banging!
Most interesting about Rome's stricken pines and what a fabulous poem.
Congratulations on a beautifully written post. It was a fascinating read and your witty poem is fabulous (literally).
So distressing to read what is happening to the pine trees. Sadly it is not the only infestation causing serious problems in Italy. Olive trees are being attacked by the bacterium xylella fastidiosa. It is spread by sap-sucking insects and it is sweeping through the country's olive groves wiping out tens of thousands of trees. You might have noticed the price of olive oil is rocketing. This is the reason.
Those trees are so distinctive. I hope they can be saved. I absolutely love the poem.
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