Its twisted branches are covered in deep red bark.
The trunks were four to five feet wide, with a dark red bark that was pitted and starred.
Its color was all but lost against the shadowed, dark red bark of the pine.
It has shreddy red bark that grows gray with age.
It is easy to identify in the winter months, when there are no leaves to compete, as the red bark shows off splendidly.
It is coated in medium or dark red bark, the small twigs with fuzzy hairs.
They are characterized by smooth, orange or red bark and stiff, twisting branches.
The trunk is flanged or buttressed in larger trees, with red brown bark.
Trees with peeling red bark - locally called tourist trees - lined the road.
The larger branches have dull red bark and the twigs are generally woolly.