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9 Clever & Practical Pine Cone Uses in the Home & Garden

A collage of pine cone images. Pine cones in a woven basket, pine cones being spritzed by essential oils and pine cones being dipped in wax for fire starters.

Whenever I’m wandering through the woods, I always have a basket or a mesh bag with me. There’s rarely a time when the forest doesn’t provide me with some treat to eat or useful objects.

There’s an abundance of edible plants and mushrooms from spring through fall. But as fall brings cooler weather and glorious colors, my basket is almost always filled with acorns and pine cones.

Pine cones, naturally, come from pine trees. While all conifers produce cones, it’s only pine trees that give us the pine cones we all know and love.

Think of pine cones as a built-in security system to ensure the next generation of trees.

The female cones contain the seeds, and it’s the female cone that we collect. However, on the tree, the cones stay tightly closed during cold or windy weather to protect these precious seeds. When the weather is warm, the pine cones open, dispersing the seeds so that new trees can grow.

Pine cones are pretty amazing parts of the natural world when you think about it. Some types of pine trees will only open their cones under the extreme temperatures produced by forest fires. The bottoms of pine cones spiral outward in what’s called the Fibonacci Sequence, a commonly found pattern in nature. And some cones remain on the tree for up to ten years.  

Usually, you can find pine cones year-round wherever pine trees abound.

A woven basket full of pine cones sits on the forest floor.
Grab a basket and start collecting. You’ll want enough pine cones for each of these ideas.

Or if you live in an area without pine cones you can find them for sale on eBay, Amazon, and Etsy.

Something about fall seems to make us want to gather them and decorate our homes with them. Maybe it’s that spiraling Fibonacci pattern that catches the eye when you see them on the forest floor.

They have a rustic charm without any additional adornment. Perhaps this simple beauty makes pine cones the perfect item for bringing some of the outdoors inside. Whatever it is, come fall, many of us find ourselves scooping up pine cones wherever we find them.

Of course, some homeowners with pine trees on their property find them more of a nuisance than anything else. Evergreens can be viewed as messy, dropping needles and cones everywhere. But these stately looking trees make excellent windbreaks and natural privacy screens, so they continue to be an excellent addition to your landscape.

And for the wise homeowner, they know all of those pine needles can be put to good use. And the many pine cones on their lawn are a blessing, rather than a curse.

But maybe you’re wondering what to do with these small, spiky treasures beyond a homey decoration? (Although if you do want that, I’ve got 25 festive crafts, decor and ornament ideas for using pine cones over here).

In this article, I’ve got nine simple and practical suggestions for you.

Keep reading to learn how to put a bounty of pine cones to good use both in your home and garden.

Bake Before Use

Someone uses oven mits to pull a baking sheet full of pine cones from the oven.
While your house will smell good, I wouldn’t suggest eating this ‘batch’ fresh from the oven.

Before using pine cones in your home or for crafts, it’s a good idea to bake them to kill any unwanted pests or plant diseases. Place them on a foil or parchment-lined baking sheet and bake them at 200 degrees F for 20-30 minutes. (Your house will smell great.)

Let the cones cool completely before using them. Pine cones and pine resin are highly flammable. It’s very important to bake them at a low temperature and check them frequently.

Using Pine Cones Around the Home

1. Protect Houseplants from Pets and Pests

A fiddleleaf fig is shown with a layer of pine cones on top of the soil in the pot.
Use pine cones in your houseplant containers to keep pets from digging.

If you have a cat or dog and you have houseplants where they can reach them, most likely, you’re often cleaning up potting soil from the floor. Put a layer of pine cones around the base of your plants to keep naughty pets at bay.

This protective layer can also prevent a fungus gnat infestation. The gnats will only lay eggs in damp soil that they can easily get to. Putting up this natural barricade makes it harder for fungus gnats to get into the soil. Not to mention, they look nice around the base of your plants.

If you go this route, be sure to water the plants below the pine cones, keeping the tops dry. This will further discourage a fungus gnat infestation.

2. Scented Pine Cones

Hands are shown holding open a plastic zippered storage bag full of pine cones and spraying scented oil into the bag.
Easily create a natural air freshener with pine cones and essential oils.

Come October; you can’t walk into a craft store or home goods store without the overpowering scent of cinnamon assaulting you. Every lobby of these stores has a bin heaped high with red-netted bags filled with cinnamon scented pine cones.

Don’t get me wrong, I love the smell of cinnamon, but these annual fall offerings are always way too overpowering to be enjoyable. Not to mention most of them use synthetic scents that smell less natural and more chemical. It’s enough to make your eyes water!

You can easily make your own scented pine cones at home with little more than a plastic storage bag, essential oils, and a spray bottle.

Scenting them yourself means you can mix a blend of essential oils to come up with your own home scent.

  • Place the pine cones into a plastic zip-top storage bag; the gallon size seems to work best.
  • Then add a few drops of your choice of essential oil.
  • Seal the bag and shake well. Let the cones sit in the sealed-bag for a week.

I found that this didn’t really distribute the essential oil well onto all of the cones. I used a small spray bottle and mixed my essential oils into a neutral carrier oil (grapeseed).

Then I spritzed the cones and the inside of the bag with this mixture before closing, shaking, and letting them sit for a week.

This application method did a much better job over all.  

After a week, remove the pine cones and place them around your home as a natural air freshener.

3. Rustic Pine Cone Place Card Holder

A place setting is showing with a pine cone used as a place setting name card holder.
Set a natural and rustic table with the addition of pine cone place hard holders.

Add a quick touch of whimsical charm to any dinner with pine cone place card holders. Tuck the notecard with your guests’ names into the top spines. Add a few extra cones around the table too.

These look lovely with no other adornment for a rustic, fall, or winter place setting. Of course, you can always dress them up if you want something with a bit more pop. However, I love the look of natural pieces inside the home.

4. Natural Fire Starters

Several wax-covered pine cones are scattered on a table next to a decorative box of matches.
These easy and quick-to-make fire starters make the perfect homemade gift.

If you’ve got an abundance of pine cones, consider making these beautiful fire starters. They’re easy to make and require only paraffin wax.

However, to make them extra special, use pieces of a broken-up crayon to color the wax. And sprinkle the wet wax with dried herbs for a wonderfully scented fire. Thyme, rosemary, nutmeg, and sage all are wonderful herbs for these fire starters.

These make thoughtful homemade gifts.

Give a dozen pine cone fire starters as a Christmas gift to anyone with a fireplace. And don’t forget the family members who love spending summer evenings around the fire pit or the friends who are always going camping.

  • Using a double boiler, slowly melt the paraffin wax over low heat. Once the wax is melted, stir in a few crayon pieces if you’re coloring the wax.
  • Now turn off the heat and set a timer for ten minutes. You want the wax to cool and thicken a little bit. Otherwise, you’ll get a thin coating of wax, and subsequent dippings will melt off.
 A hand is holding a pine cone that was just dipped in hot wax.
You want the wax to be warm enough to be easy to work with, but not so cool that it barely coats the pine cone.
  • Stir the wax again and then dip the cone into the wax, rolling it to coat all sides. Hold the pine cone on its side, allowing excess wax to drip back into the pan.
  • Place the cone on a sheet of wax or parchment paper to solidify. If you want, add dried herbs to scent the fire starters. Sprinkle the herbs on while the wax is still wet.
  • You can then dip the pine cones again to cover the herbs in wax and build up a thicker layer. Repeat the process of melting the wax and then letting it cool a bit again.
  • Let the cones cool on the paper for 24 hours.

I held the pine cone by the tip when I dipped mine. However, if you want a firmer grasp or do this with kids, wrap a bread tie or piece of floral wire around the tip to make dipping the cones easier.

A tip – the easiest way to remove the wax from your pan is to put the pan in the freezer for half an hour once it cools. The wax will easily pop out and break up once it’s frozen.

Using Pine Cones Around the Garden

5. Peanut Butter Bird Feeder

Two peanut butter and bird seed covered pine cones hang from string in a tree.
Get the kids to help you make these, and then get them interested in identifying the birds that come to visit.

This craft is great for little hands who don’t mind getting sticky.

  • Use a butter knife or clean popsicle stick to spread peanut butter all over the pine cone.
  • Then roll the coated cone in birdseed. Press the seed into the peanut butter once it’s completely covered.
  • Add a length of string and hang these natural bird feeders from the branches of trees and off your porch.

Now sit back with a cup of tea and enjoy the myriad of feathered friends you’ll attract. If you’re lucky, you’ll even find more adventurous squirrels swinging wildly from the pine cones while enjoying this tasty treat.

6. Mulch that Keeps Out Pests

A flower bed is shown with a layer of pine cones used for mulch.
Protect your shrubs and flower beds with a layer of long-lasting pine cone mulch.

This is a great way for homeowners with pine trees on their property to put those bucketloads of pine cones to good use.

Pine cones make for excellent natural mulch around shrubs and flower beds.

They’re slow to break down and will last for years. The natural resin coating the cones makes them water-resistant, meaning water will slowly drip down to the soil rather than being soaked up by the cones. This feature also prevents soil erosion.

And if you use whole pine cones as mulch, you can keep neighborhood cats and other four-legged critters from digging in your flower beds or fouling up your shrubs.

7. Use Pine Cones in Container Gardening

Gloved hands pour pine cones into a bucket from a basket.
Save your back and your wallet with this great container gardening trick.

Container gardeners rejoice! You’re going to love this tip.

As anyone who has grown vegetables and herbs in containers can tell you, all of that soil gets pretty heavy. And filling up those containers with soil can get pretty spendy, pretty quickly.

Add a layer of pine cones to the bottom of each container before adding soil. Fill the container ¼ full of pine cones. This will make the containers lighter and save you money by using less soil. Not to mention it will improve drainage.

Obviously, this tip shouldn’t be used for root crops such as carrots or potatoes (which you can easily grow in a 5-gallon bucket).

But for most vegetables which fruit above the soil – think tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants – this trick is ideal. The root systems for these types of plants rarely go down into a 5-gallon bucket that deep.

Because pine cones take so long to break down, you can reuse them for several years. And, leading to my next tip, you can add them to the compost pile once they do start to break down.

8. Put Pine Cones in the Compost Pile

A close up of compost with whole and broken up pine cones added in.
If your compost pile needs more ‘brown’ or dry additions, consider using pine cones.

Pine cones are a great ‘brown’ addition to the compost pile. Because they’re so slow to break down, it’s best to break them up first. If you have access to a chipper, chipping the pine cones before adding them to the compost is the best way to go.

Putting your pine cones in the compost is another excellent idea for folks who have many pine trees on their property and an excess of cones.

9. Ladybug Hotel

A couple of pine cones have been placed near lettuce growing in a garden.
Add these natural ‘ladybug hotels’ to your garden to encourage the beneficial bugs to stick around.

Ladybugs are a fantastic beneficial insect to have around the garden. These aphid-munching beetles can be lured to your garden by giving them a place to hide and reproduce.

Scatter a few pine cones in and around the plants, and you’ll be providing these beneficial bugs with a place to live while keeping them close to your plants.

If you want to get the kids involved, have them paint the pine cones or decorate them to look like little houses.

As you can see, pine cones aren’t just for pretty winter décor. These tough little woody treasures are incredibly useful around the home and garden.

Whether you’re a forager with a basketful or a homeowner who’s got wheelbarrows full, I hope you’ll save some and put a few of these suggestions to use.




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Tracey Besemer

Hey there, my name is Tracey. I’m the editor-in-chief here at Rural Sprout.

Many of our readers already know me from our popular Sunday newsletters. (You are signed up for our newsletters, right?) Each Sunday, I send a friendly missive from my neck of the woods in Pennsylvania. It’s a bit like sitting on the front porch with a friend, discussing our gardens over a cup of tea.

Originally from upstate NY, I’m now an honorary Pennsylvanian, having lived here for the past 18 years.

I grew up spending weekends on my dad’s off-the-grid homestead, where I spent much of my childhood roaming the woods and getting my hands dirty.

I learned how to do things most little kids haven’t done in over a century.

Whether it was pressing apples in the fall for homemade cider, trudging through the early spring snows of upstate NY to tap trees for maple syrup, or canning everything that grew in the garden in the summer - there were always new adventures with each season.

As an adult, I continue to draw on the skills I learned as a kid. I love my Wi-Fi and knowing pizza is only a phone call away. And I’m okay with never revisiting the adventure that is using an outhouse in the middle of January.

These days, I tend to be almost a homesteader.

I take an eclectic approach to homesteading, utilizing modern convenience where I want and choosing the rustic ways of my childhood as they suit me.

I’m a firm believer in self-sufficiency, no matter where you live, and the power and pride that comes from doing something for yourself.

I’ve always had a garden, even when the only space available was the roof of my apartment building. I’ve been knitting since age seven, and I spin and dye my own wool as well. If you can ferment it, it’s probably in my pantry or on my kitchen counter. And I can’t go more than a few days without a trip into the woods looking for mushrooms, edible plants, or the sound of the wind in the trees.

You can follow my personal (crazy) homesteading adventures on Almost a Homesteader and Instagram as @aahomesteader.

Peace, love, and dirt under your nails,

Tracey
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