I generally keep acorns in the beer crisper over winter, start them in pots around late February, and then move them to their final destination in may-june. I rarely keep them over the next winter.
Nice setup Teeder! Love the long tap root pots, mass production there friend!Yes, in my basement under shop lights.
I started Feb 19th. And then more recent.
Yes, in my basement under shop lights.
I started Feb 19th. And then more recent.
The Bur oak - White oak cross is known as a Bebbs oak. Big trees, big acorns (usually) and hybrid vigor (acorns in 10 yrs or less). Wonderful tree to plant in northern locales. Attached is a photo of mine. Lucky P's shows more white oak parentage; mine is more bur oak regarding caps and acorn shape.I have several 25 yr old grafts of 'McDaniel' BurXEnglish, selected by plantsman JC McDaniel (Uof IL) from a cemetery somewhere in IL... IIRC. Photo of a few 'McDaniel' acorns I gathered yesterday.
Also have an F2 BurEnglish from OIKOS that makes much smaller acorns, and has a semi-fastigiate growth habit.
All of these are in my yard, along with several other hybrid oaks and a number of large-acorn & low-tannin bur oak selections; deer do come in at night and eat acorns, but I'm not usually out to see them, and don't have cameras out.
Next time you get out there, please take a picture of the trees. I want to see what their shape looks like.I was at BassPro in KC today and picked a quart bag of acorns off those trees again. I could of easily filled a couple gallon pail they where really coming down today while I was there. I tried direct seedling them this past spring and had limited luck with that but we have been fighting drought, next spring I will try and get some started in RM’s
Perhaps tomorrow I’ll get some photos I have to work up in KC tomorrow anyway.Next time you get out there, please take a picture of the trees. I want to see what their shape looks like.
Thanks!
BTW, all the trees I planted out last year look great!