Turkey Creek
5 year old buck +
They look like mine, which are basically the same size but in the ground in the nursery. Looks like the tops got winter killed.
Kabic,
They do look like you had some dieback on the tops. Did you have these in the ground all winter ? Were they covered with a lot of soil/mulch?
The leaves can hang on until the buds swell and pop them off. That is normal for chestnuts and some oaks. I'd look at pruning them to a central leader. They may be sprouting at the base if the soil is moist and up against the stem too high.
I did give them some water over winter. I gave them each a little bit about once a month.Did you water them at all through the winter?
Give them a little time to see which buds pop and open. Cut back just above one. Cutting to a central leader will give you the best upright growth which us what you want.
Photo in post 52 was taken towards the fall and the leaves where turning. My trees area about the same as last report, the 4 or 5 trees that were greening up are still the only ones that have. I still need to prune back to a central leader. The rest I assumed died. I will get out and take some pictures soon. I think in a week or two I may pull one of the dead looking ones out the bucket and look at the roots.Kabic,
How are yours doing now? Have they had a growth spurt?
When was the photo is post 52 taken? Was it when their leaves were turning or were they stressed?
The ones I over wintered in rootrapper bags in the ground have put on 6" growth. I cleaned up some lower trunk sprouts on a few and clipped to a central leader on most.
Mo,
They should be taking off this year for you. Im pulling fOr you. I think your drought definitely knocked them back.
Mo three years ago was a pretty nasty drought. Had you planted last growing season you would prolly still have 90% of your trees. Hopefully we have a good growing season this yr. You gonna replace the ones that died? Or are you done with chestnuts?
I am about ready to give up on chestnuts. No signs of leaves on any of mine yet and I had only a handful of the nuts I bought from Chestnut Ridge of Pike County germinate. When/if somebody comes up with a truly central MN hardy chestnut I'll give 'em a shot. Until then, I'll focus on fruit trees/shrubs
That's a bummer Stu. I was hoping they would grow for you. There are chestnuts that survive -30. The only other thing I can think of would be a heavy mulch in the late fall. I know it helped this winter on some roses we have. The ones we mulched did fine. The non mulched died.
My Pike County nuts were not that good this year either. I'm guessing they were not handled as well as they have been in the past due to the illness. They may have sat on the ground longer or not stored the same. I could tell the difference when I got them.
I didn't grow any indoors this year so mine are way behind where they usually are. That's ok. I may end up over wintering them at home again. I've got 30 or so I over wintered at home last winter that will be ready this fall.
I was far less than 50% with me nuts, some of my tree are 2', but I'm worried about them being hardy for my zone.I got about 50% germ with my chestnut ridge nuts and was a lil disappointed myself. Thought I did somthing wrong
When you buy Dunstan chestnuts trees from Realtree Nursery & Chestnut Hills are they grafts or grown from seed? If grown from seed to you think they weed out the ones that dont match what they think a Dunstan should look like?
I think most of us growing from nuts are getting them from Chestnut Ridge, I'm guessing there is bound to be some diversity in these open pollinated trees. Hence maybe why some of them die and some of them survive in our northern locations. Pike County Illinois is really not that far north.
No idea. Same kind of ground as the others. No standing water.Huntall,
What do you think it died of? Couldn't be cold. Was it in a wet location? Any pests that could've girdled it?