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Heather

Hmmm, I guess between the tropical leanings in zone 9 (okay 8B if you're one to split hairs) and growing up in North East Texas where 3/4 of the trees are pine trees (yawn)... I'm not much of a conifer kind of gal. I DO however, like the little dwarf ones. I think you have one somewhere in a foundation planting or something that I went, "Ohh, yeah, I like that."

But hooray for the PB removal! The second best thing in gardening, I think, is ridding your life of a plant you hate. One of the highlights of my gardening career is ripping out those Indian Hawthorns that my builder put in. Oh what a blessed joy that was. My heart still leaps with pleasure at the memory of my garbage can full of those characterless balls of green. I was just eyeing my neighbor's IH's this morning and thinking, "I wonder if she'd notice if I ripped those out and put in butterfly bushes?"

Kasmira

Jeffrey Pine! When the sun heats the bark, it smells just like butterscotch. This is my absolute favorite conifer.

Sandy

My favorite conifers of all time are Cryptomerias. Love them, can't get enough of them. Big ones, little ones. I love so many different kinds of conifers it is hard to choose. Word of warning. There is such thing as too many conifers in the garden. Broadleaf evergreens are a nice compliment.

Gardening crash-test dummy

If I had to choose a conifer I would have to choose the spruce family, especially the blue spruces.

It's good to hear that someone else has to suffer from inane laws about cutting trees down. Our council, in their wisdom, planted some peppermint saplings on the verge of each house in our estate (like our area needs more peppermints!!). Unfortunately I slipped with the chainsaw as I was cutting some weeds around it and it died soon after we accidentally dug the root ball up.

Judith

Right on about the Bradford Pear! Part of me is laughing as I have planted this one when I lived in the city--trying to gain privacy in a postage stamp size backyard (& impatient)--the tree annoyed me so much I had to move--well, that wasn't really why I moved...but almost. I'd love to get cedar if I could find it. I think all/most gardeners have regrets after planting some of the things we plant?

Val

Conifers of any sort are dear to me. On the university campus where I work there is a conifer "garden" around a central pond in one of the large spaces enclosed by buildings - it's been wonderful to watch them grow in all their shapes and shadings.

Closer to home, when we bought our house 11 years ago, the vendors had put 6 Castlewellan Gold http://www.fernview.com.au/varieties/cupressocyparis_castlewellan.php plants all in a row along the back veranda. If we had let them be, the whole of our back garden would have been hidden from the house behind an impenetrable wall, throwing our house into perpetual gloom. My husband carefully moved them to strategically chosen areas along the fence. All flourished and now provide privacy without overwhelming because they are not clumped together.

Pam L

I grew up surrounded, literally, by pines, the large white "pitch pines" that were to rough to climb for kids and dripped sap everywhere. They made for great bonfires with their fallen needles, but you can't do that anymore.So I'm not a big fan of pines, but I love my blue upright junipers. They look great with the roseglow barberries and sea green junipers planted nearby for contrast.

Nelumbo

I like the conifer idea. Our neighborhood association had the opposite request- they would *love* for you to cut down pear trees. For some reason our builder planted several right on the street, and so they tend to hang over in the street when some of our neighbors don't prune them enough.

You've gotten me thinking seriously about removing those crepe myrtles that are just in the wrong spot...

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