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  1. Tickrancher

    Honeylocust Scions Available

    After a recent edge feathering project we collected an extra locust scion that is available for pick-up.
  2. Tickrancher

    2022 Scion Exchange

    I am hoping to find Potomac, Shenandoah, Susquahanna, or Wabash, pawpaw scions. Disease resistant apple varieties and several of the Claypool and Lehman persimmons are available to trade.
  3. Tickrancher

    Planting dogwood seeds?

    If you are determined to grow dogwood from seed, below is information from an old MDC publication that might help. Shrub Species Grown at the George O. White Nursery___________________ Dogwood (Cornus spp.) We grow five species of dogwood, including flowering (C. florida), roughleaf (C...
  4. Tickrancher

    Cup Plant

    They hold their leaves well though they shrivel some. This photo is from early February. Side branches have been cut off to collect seed and some stalks have been previously cut for the mulch pile. This is only one plant. A layer four or five plants deep might work for a screen if the deer...
  5. Tickrancher

    Cup Plant

    I'm coming at this from the other direction. A cup plant at the house grew 8 feet tall and 3 feet wide in two years. The seeds have been collected and now I am looking for the best use at the farm. Is it as a screen or as a native perennial food plot?
  6. Tickrancher

    Cup Plant

    Has anyone tried growing Cup Plant (Silphium perfoliatum) for either deer browse or used as a screen? Illinoiswildflowers.info states that "Large herbivores, especially cattle, may eat the eat leaves of Cup Plant, especially those of immature plants". Does that include deer? At the University...
  7. Tickrancher

    Red Astrachan apple

    I had one in my suburban St. Louis MO yard 20 years ago. Apples ripened around the first of August. Pick them early or they will split wide open. Texture was softer than I like but he tart flavor should have made a good pie. We all got a good laugh when the first apple pie slice was pulled from...
  8. Tickrancher

    Northern Spy Vigor

    Northern Spy will get larger than most varieties on similar rootstock. I had one growing on M7 at my last house and it grew much larger than nearby Melrose and Newtown Pippin. It grows large because it doesn't waste any energy on fruit. In my desperation for apples I tied down a lower branch to...
  9. Tickrancher

    Plum Grafting

    I'm learning too. The American plum is very tough, at least in Ralls County Missouri. It is unclear to me if this is because of an inherent disease resistace or because my soil and climate are ideal for plums. Occasionally you see a tree that has some gummy sap oozing from the trunk but the...
  10. Tickrancher

    Plum Grafting

    i The Tick Ranch is loaded with wild plums that ripen in mid-summer. Grafting Waneta, Ozark Premier and Alderman scions should both extend the season another month and provide some take home fruit. So far, so good. Five out of six grafts took. I haven't seen this idea mentioned on any deer...
  11. Tickrancher

    Property help

    Yep, we need more information. Is the property in Wisconsin or Florida?
  12. Tickrancher

    Paw Paw propagation

    Jack, how tall were your pawpaws when you transplanted? I have been doing something very similar to what you described and have had the same results. When I moved my trees some were two years old and three foot tall and they showed no ability to handle the sun. Would height make a difference? Do...
  13. Tickrancher

    Favorite tree varieties

    The nanny berry came with the farm and it is established. Its a viburnum and they hit them all hard in NE Missouri. There is a big area of it on an east facing hill. Deer are in it all the time and they hit it hard. Because there is so much and because it is so thick it stands up to the...
  14. Tickrancher

    Paw Paw propagation

    After years of failed efforts to grow pawpaws in full sun the Tickranch now has a tent city. These photo were taken in July. It was very dry this year so not a lot of new growth. The shaded trees look better than those in full sun but it is too early to say if the effort has been worth the...
  15. Tickrancher

    Favorite tree varieties

    I have been planting chinkapin oaks at the Tickranch. They are highly preferred, right at the top of the list. Okay, so tied with swamp white oak. The advantage for the chinkapins is that they will start making acorns at a younger age. Also turkeys like the small size of the acorn. If we are...
  16. Tickrancher

    Mutsu apple???

    I had a dwarf Mutsu growing in my back yard in St. Louis county. It got sprayed occasionally and watered as needed. The apples were large and very good. It was growing next to an Ashmead's Kernal that has a reputation of some disease resistance. The Mutsu did better than the Ashmead in this...
  17. Tickrancher

    What tree is this

    That looks like black walnut. Scrape off the top 1/4 inch of bark with a sharp knife. Check the color of the inner bark and if it is chocolate brown you have walnut. Because of that hump in the trunk that tree is not likely to ever be veneer quality. The Professor is correct though, in another...
  18. Tickrancher

    Project W: Columnar Apple Shot Plot

    How is the disease resistance in columnar trees? Fire blight can be devastating in Missouri, especially in wildlife plantings that may not be sprayed.
  19. Tickrancher

    Project W: Columnar Apple Shot Plot

    Cool idea. Planting tall thin apple trees near a bow stand would concentrate the food and hopefully the deer. One problem might be trees blowing over in storms. You may want to use a strong post or a trellis if the trees are not in a sheltered location. Have you considered shaping the trees via...
  20. Tickrancher

    Favorite shrubs for habitat improvement

    My chokeberries are planted on high ground but the MDC seedling order form has them checked as useful for wetland restoration. I haven't planted any is wet areas so I can't speak from experience. Another option on moist low ground is false indigo. It grows real well, at least in NE Missouri...
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