Just kidding with you. Keep up the good work.How about bumping up the grafting production a little more chainsaw? Maybe then I could get some trees before Ryan sells out. wow that's a lot of grafting.
Just kidding with you. Keep up the good work.How about bumping up the grafting production a little more chainsaw? Maybe then I could get some trees before Ryan sells out. wow that's a lot of grafting.
Chainsaw -cutting tool instead of a knife to cut both the grafts and the tongue cut; could not have cut with a knife for even half of a day at the pace this crew was grafting.
Bowsnbucks, Thanks for the info on your watering bucket. The cutting tool I am using is a grafting block made by Scionon.Chainsaw -
What kind of cutting tool are you talking about?? Is it one of those that makes cuts that look like a piece of a jigsaw puzzle?? (tongue-in-groove type of cuts).
Gravel Road, Over the last few years red dogwood has taken hold here naturally on its own in a few spots. It looks like a really great companion plant to apple tree groves. It gets browsed regularly especially in late February and March here yet it comes back and it grows well in the marginal wet areas. I'm thinking of trying caging just a few hoping letting them get to maturity might be a good way to help get them spread throughout the various apple groves throughout the property.
Elderberry grows here and I think Nanny berry as well but they haven't been able to multiply themselves here like the red dogwood has. If it weren't for the deer browsing the red dogwood so heavily it would take over much of our lower ground areas.
Am looking forward to hearing how your plantings of the cuttings work out and their possible applicable use as a secondary plant in apple grove areas.
Dave, that swamp area behind my orchard plot was cut probably 3 years ago and has really popped with red dogwood and elderberry. It has really added a supplemental browse buffet to my food offerings. Best news is I only cut 50-75 yards up the swamp hole, I probably can go another 100-150 yards. The area is only 30 yards across so it serves no other purpose.Gravel Road, Over the last few years red dogwood has taken hold here naturally on its own in a few spots. It looks like a really great companion plant to apple tree groves. It gets browsed regularly especially in late February and March here yet it comes back and it grows well in the marginal wet areas. I'm thinking of trying caging just a few hoping letting them get to maturity might be a good way to help get them spread throughout the various apple groves throughout the property.
Elderberry grows here and I think Nanny berry as well but they haven't been able to multiply themselves here like the red dogwood has. If it weren't for the deer browsing the red dogwood so heavily it would take over much of our lower ground areas.
Am looking forward to hearing how your plantings of the cuttings work out and their possible applicable use as a secondary plant in apple grove areas.
It is a definite winner for us in colder areas at least. Glad to hear it is feeding deer on your extra cold tundra land as well.I see red osier growing in my deer cages. It gets heavily browsed outside of the cages since this is a wintering area.
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That's great Jeremy. Is there enough sun there to add an apple tree mound of dirt every twenty-five feet or so also?Dave, that swamp area behind my orchard plot was cut probably 3 years ago and has really popped with red dogwood and elderberry. It has really added a supplemental browse buffet to my food offerings. Best news is I only cut 50-75 yards up the swamp hole, I probably can go another 100-150 yards. The area is only 30 yards across so it serves no other purpose.
There are some cool humps in there. I have a handful of white swamp oaks I planted that are now 12’ on average. There are a couple big hawthornes on a couple of the humps. I was planning another plot at the other end for some apples but that is on hold as I work on the one behind the pines. I have a lot of chainsaw work to do this year.That's great Jeremy. Is there enough sun there to add an apple tree mound of dirt every twenty-five feet or so also?
Thank you H2Fowler for reading the whole thread and for your comments. I am very happy to have started this thread. It has worked out well with excellent sharing of ideas all around and has helped keep my and others enthusiasm for apple projects at a very high level. The fruit tree section of this forum has been an especially effective and accelerated learning tool for me as I pursue the objective of having the deer here live to older ages, travel during daylight hours on this property and have food available to them thru the tough period of January thru March.I know that I have looked at parts of this thread over the last year from time to time. This weekend I started from the beginning and read posts when I could going through the whole thread same as River X did.
Thank you Chainsaw! LOTS of great info in here I've learned a lot. And I found a few more varieties of crabs I want to put out in our orchards, don't know why but I had never really looked the Blue Hill stuff over...WOW what great info and trees specially for no maintenance wildlife orchards. If I can get on the order list that one is going to cost me some $$$ I've got big eyes reading through Ryan’s stuff.
Thank you H2Fowler for reading the whole thread and for your comments. I am very happy to have started this thread. It has worked out well with excellent sharing of ideas all around and has helped keep my and others enthusiasm for apple projects at a very high level. The fruit tree section of this forum has been an especially effective and accelerated learning tool for me as I pursue the objective of having the deer here live to older ages, travel during daylight hours on this property and have food available to them thru the tough period of January thru March.
What Blue Hill Wildlife Nursey, Turkey Creek and Northern Whitetail Crabs (and whoever else focused on creating great wildlife trees) are doing focusing on finding and growing special trees for wildlife will and is already changing how many of us help feed the deer on our properties using wildlife trees. I refer to the special trees as the top 1% of wild apple trees but actually they are more like the top half of 1% of wild apple trees here that qualify as special. Like everything though, nothing is absolute, meaning that the very best tree here which meets all criteria for being special for wildlife may or may not carry that status into every property it is tried on. I intend to continue to try most trees on my property that others have found to be special on their properties but I keep in mind that the trees that have already proven themselves to be special here are likely to continue that status when grafted onto the most appropriate rootstock. I don't mean to exclude orchard varieties as some of them have proven to be special for our needs; however I think that there are many more special wild apples out there to discover once more people begin to look at their trees on their hunting lands and general area and assess them based on their performance as they see them. Likely every hunter either has one great tree on their property or knows of one in their area.