bornagain62511
5 year old buck +
Just looking for everyone's opinion on what is the best made tree tube on the market? please share your experience and advice. thanks!
Just looking for everyone's opinion on what is the best made tree tube on the market? please share your experience and advice. thanks!
X2 on pvc conduit. Buy a 10' and cut in half. I believe the gray is UV resistantJust looking for everyone's opinion on what is the best made tree tube on the market? please share your experience and advice. thanks!
The key is diameter and proper venting throughout the tube. Solid tubes can promote mold and fungus in some situations. If they are not tight to the ground, you can get just the opposite effect where the chimney effect dries out your seedling. In some cases, tubes will promote growth with a greenhouse effect. In other cases, they can do more harm than good. Some trees do better in tubes than others. It doesn't matter if you buy them vented or vent them yourself, but they need proper venting.
For me, the positives and negatives pretty much balance except for one factor, relatively inexpensive protection. They are the least costly option to protect the central leader from browsing. I uses them for chestnuts but use cages for apples.
I've used Protex solid tubes that I vented myself. They are some of the least expensive when you find them on sale. They come as flat sheets that wrap around . I did not like the way the connected with flaps so I punched holes and used cable ties. This wrapping design allows you to fairly easily remove the tubes by clipping the cable ties to clean out any debris and then reinstall them. I used a drill press to drill holes through the sheets for venting and closing them with cable ties.
The Plantra tubes come properly vented and are quick to install, but they slide over the top of the seedling. This is fine if the tree is a whip, but once branching starts, you can't easily remove and reinstall them.
I've also used Bluex years ago. They were similar to the Protex in how I dealt with them as they came in sheets and are meant to wrap around.
Different tubes have different characteristics as those above demonstrate. I don't thenk there is a best tube. One more key is staking. Trees need wind to stress them when they are young or they can get brittle and snap in high wind when they get older. Using PVC like Scott indicates allows for some flex. I would not use them with rigid stakes that don't flex.
Thanks,
jack
And I can tell you the worst tubes...Mesh ones.
How are they working for you, Catscratch?
Short ones! 4ft max if for chestnuts!
Chestnuts get to spindley in 5ft tubes in my opinion!
Everything gets spindley in 5 fters but 4 ft just do not offer enough protection from browsing in my experience. The bigger the dia tube the better as mice seem to prefer the smaller dia ones to try and nest. I go back and pull tubes off at end of 1st growing season and get rid of dead leaves, trim the stem of lower branches still in tube and wrap with window screen and pop tube back on. Screen is needed for both tubes and cages, no exceptions. I dont use tubes as much now that I plant smaller quantites of stuff but Miracle 5 ft tube as noted above work ok. I also restake stuff after things are 8ft+ to allow more flexing and build up the stem.
Years ago I got a pile of them thru some promo with the nwtf. Have to check around for best deals every year tho. When doing lots of hardwood bareroots and using tubes is a good combo in my opinion. Ok so you maybe have a doz of something, just do cages right away.
Yep, those are the ones I was talking about. I had a few dozen given to me by a local friend from that old forum. He swore that they were the absolute worst. He said his deer went out of the way to smash the crap out of them. I thankfully accepted the tubes and used quite a few right off the bat. Doug wasn't wrong. My deer destroy those things and it isn't just to get to the tree. They just seem to like f-ing them up. I've watched, with my own 2 eyes, a button buck smashing the crap out of one. He looked like a destructive juvenile delinquent. A punk. He was having the time of his life smashing someone else's stuff. Pretty much every single mesh tube I used got smashed.I've had some success with the mesh tubes. As Jordon Selsor points out, there can be issues with tall tubes and chestnuts, but I now use 5' tubes on many. Because of that concern, one of the things I tried was using an 18" tube on chestnuts and sliding a mesh tube over it. I'm not sure if we are talking about the same thing. Forestry supply calls these Rigid Tree Protectors: https://www.forestry-suppliers.com/product_pages/products.php?mi=16201&itemnum=17045&redir=Y They don't act like tubes at all for me. My chestnut lateral branches grow through them and are nipped of, but the central leaders are generally not touched so they don't end up being bushes that will likely never produce nuts. The problem I found with them is that until the central leader gets out of the top, it will sometime want to grow through the mesh and get nipped off. I need to keep an eye on them as the trees grow to make sure this doesn't happen. Some lateral branches will get large enough to be constricted by the mesh. I just cut the mesh to make room. One technique I tried was taking one of the small 18" protex sheets and putting it inside the mesh and sliding it so the top of the central leader is in the protex. This keeps it from growing out of the mesh and I just slide the protex up as the seedling grows. These mesh protectors won't stop a deer that really wants the tree, but if you have plenty of browse like I do, it is enough to make it more convenient for the deer to eat something else. They don't act like tree tubes and don't have any of the same positive or negative impacts on seedlings.
How about you Catscratch?
Thanks,
jack
Yep, those are the ones I was talking about. I had a few dozen given to me by a local friend from that old forum. He swore that they were the absolute worst. He said his deer went out of the way to smash the crap out of them. I thankfully accepted the tubes and used quite a few right off the bat. Doug wasn't wrong. My deer destroy those things and it isn't just to get to the tree. They just seem to like f-ing them up. I've watched, with my own 2 eyes, a button buck smashing the crap out of one. He looked like a destructive juvenile delinquent. A punk. He was having the time of his life smashing someone else's stuff. Pretty much every single mesh tube I used got smashed.
I offered them for free on one of these forums and Catscratch accepted the offer. Last I heard, if I'm remembering correctly, he didn't like them either.
Another suck-ass thing about mesh is trying to put them over an existing tree. Every single branch tip pokes thru the mesh and gets broken. Man, I hate those things.
Hey, those tubes look familiar! So, am I mistaken when I thought you didn't like them?Ttt
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You are not mistaken. But not liking something isn't necessarily a reason to not use it... if the alternative is to leave them completely unprotected.Hey, those tubes look familiar! So, am I mistaken when I thought you didn't like them?
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You are not mistaken. But not liking something isn't necessarily a reason to not use it... if the alternative is to leave them completely unprotected.
Once they grow out of the 3 or 4ft tube I wrap some geo grid fencing around it to extend another 2ft protection. I make it cone shaped so it can flush out an blow around in the wind. Been working more better than 5ft tubesEverything gets spindley in 5 fters but 4 ft just do not offer enough protection from browsing in my experience. The bigger the dia tube the better as mice seem to prefer the smaller dia ones to try and nest. I go back and pull tubes off at end of 1st growing season and get rid of dead leaves, trim the stem of lower branches still in tube and wrap with window screen and pop tube back on. Screen is needed for both tubes and cages, no exceptions. I dont use tubes as much now that I plant smaller quantites of stuff but Miracle 5 ft tube as noted above work ok. I also restake stuff after things are 8ft+ to allow more flexing and build up the stem.
Years ago I got a pile of them thru some promo with the nwtf. Have to check around for best deals every year tho. When doing lots of hardwood bareroots and using tubes is a good combo in my opinion. Ok so you maybe have a doz of something, just do cages right away.