We get dead standing pine. It's not mushy; it's not in the least mushy, and it doesn't push over, (unless it's growing in a bog) we need bowsaws to take them down safely.
The Forestry Commission often leave dead standing when they clear fell an area. The birds and insects soon turn them into white skeletons that the wind slowly breaks up. I have very rarely seen rusty red crumbled timber that someone said was pine, but that was on a sandy coastal site in Wales. We called that punk.
Maybe mushy means something else in your neck of the woods
M
The Forestry Commission often leave dead standing when they clear fell an area. The birds and insects soon turn them into white skeletons that the wind slowly breaks up. I have very rarely seen rusty red crumbled timber that someone said was pine, but that was on a sandy coastal site in Wales. We called that punk.
Maybe mushy means something else in your neck of the woods

M