yoderjac
5 year old buck +
Dunstans for sale at RK for $60 right now. Nice 7' trees.
Now them is expensive chestnuts!
Dunstans for sale at RK for $60 right now. Nice 7' trees.
I subscribe to JohnSangl, UKForestry, and others on YouTube. The American Chestnut story is fascinating! I am holding out hope that the New York chestnut group (exact name slips my mind) can insert the blight resistant wheat gene to the American Chestnut. The CC grows short and wide. The American much taller and extremely fast!
Hello, do you notice bigger nuts and later drop time from dunstans compared to Chinese. ThanksI have Dunstan's and Chinese planted and have gotten nuts off both types. For me in my area with loamy clay the Chinese seem to be more forgiving and more hardy than the Dunstan's...and are way cheaper to purchase. The only way I would buy any more Dunstan's to put in would be if I found them on sale, Rural King carries them here in spring and fall.
The past few years I have been stratifying a couple bags of nuts from my stuff in fridge and direct seeding in early spring and walking away from them, success rate is probably around 10%-15% from ones I see walking around property and I'm happy with that for the little effort I put in to them.
Hello, do you notice bigger nuts and later drop time from dunstans compared to Chinese. Thanks
I also don't think you can compare Dunstan and Chinese directly. With dunstan, if you are talking about dunstan as a variety, you have a fixed set of characteristics. If you are using Dunstan as a trade name, I believe they are seed grown trees from Dunstan nuts. While not fixed like a named variety, the genetic variety is likely pretty small given that chestnuts are wind pollinated.
Chinese really refers to the group of trees that originated in China. They have been bred for specific characteristics and there are lots of Chinese varieties. I would guess (just a guess) that there is probably as much variability between Chinese varieties as there is between most Chinese varieties and Dunstan. So, when H20fwler says his Dunstans drop a week or two later, that is compared to the particular Chinese trees he has. I believe Auburn patented a couple varieties called Au Buck III and IV that drop later, even into November and as far as I can tell they are fully Chinese.
I think chestnuts are truer to seed than say apples, at least as far as characteristics that are important to wildlife go. If you are looking for specific drop times, I would start with specific varieties and perhaps their progeny.
Thanks,
I planted a bunch of Chinese seedlings this spring and since have discovered several other chestnuts in the area.. some large 40 and 50 ft trees I've been collecting nuts from and enjoying since about October 1st... All nuts would fit into a quarter.. I also discovered two other people who planted trees from Walmart within the last 7 years and the burs are much bigger and they haven't even started falling yet..i am going to be able to compare size and taste soon.
Jack
I planted a bunch of Chinese seedlings this spring and since have discovered several other chestnuts in the area.. some large 40 and 50 ft trees I've been collecting nuts from and enjoying since about October 1st... All nuts would fit into a quarter.. I also discovered two other people who planted trees from Walmart within the last 7 years and the burs are much bigger and they haven't even started falling yet..i am going to be able to compare size and taste soon.
Dunstan are mostly Chinese. I have visited an orchard in Danby NY that has 30 year old Dunstan and some other varieties. They are cold hardy in that area which is zone 5a and has seen -25F. Some of the trees have sunscald which is probably an issue with them being on the edge of their growing range. Another thing is that while they displayed no blight for many years, they have some pretty big cankers now that the trees seem to be tolerating. Some cankers had mostly encircled limbs as large as 6".
The guy running the Missouri agroforestry chestnut orchard is pretty sure all the Chinese genetics we have in the US are from south China, which is why they struggle past -20F.
Tom Wahl from Red Fern Farm said that the "Mossbarger" variety has reportedly survived -40F. He also likes the Qing, Gideon and Luvall's Monster for cold hardiness. Luvall's is pollen sterile so you need something else to go with it. Empire Chestnut / Route 9 Cooperative is selling all those varieties right now. Even if you just buy the mixture of seed and plant them real tight at like 5-5 or 10-10 and then keep culling them I bet you will find some that are hardy enough.
Recent genetic testing has shown that Chinese chestnut needs 8-11 genes for blight resistance. That means virtually all hybrids with American will be inferior to pure Chinese, and that the backcross seeds the ACF has been proudly selling for nearly $100 a pop aren't worth the price tag. Luckily the NY chapter is on the brink of getting approval for their transgenic tree. If you join the NY chapter, or probably just get in touch with SUNY-ESF, they are giving away 10,000 trees for free if/when they are approved. Also if you join the NY chapter the president will mail you pure american seeds for free.
I subscribe to JohnSangl, UKForestry, and others on YouTube. The American Chestnut story is fascinating! I am holding out hope that the New York chestnut group (exact name slips my mind) can insert the blight resistant wheat gene to the American Chestnut. The CC grows short and wide. The American much taller and extremely fast!
Good stuff BKY. The NY group is SUNY-ESF. They were successful with their wheat gene insertion and blight resistant american chestnut. They have backcrossed their Darling 58 (a line of transgenic american) with a pure wild american. That offspring has successfully produced nuts with about 50% (I think actual was 56 of 115 samples) showing blight resistance in controlled innoculations, just like it should be. This summer they have successfully proven blight resistance in a transgenic chinkapin. The transgenic american is going through the FDA approval process. I may have some info slightly off since this is from past reading/discussions with the folks working on these and I am attempting to share from my memory.
We will see a blight resistant pure american in our lifetime...hopefully in less than 5 years.
I agree with all your points!...and I am seeing/hearing the same things from people working directly on approval. However, their reaction was predictable....the closer your are to success the more people who try to bring you back down.Hopefully it doesn’t get bogged down in the regulatory process. I have seen a lot of uptick in the anti-gmo crowd regarding this specific project recently. I think the transgenic pure American Chestnut is our best bet to get our historic trees back. The crosses, however small, all seem to have DRASTIC effects on growth form.
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Which is why, to me, the tree-plantation debate is a distraction from the more important question raised by the chestnut project: Does a GMO in the forest diminish its naturalness? To answer that, we need to grapple with another question: How natural is the forest, anyway? And, perhaps even weirder: How unnatural is a GMO?
. Good stuff. I think you mean it needs specific genes from 8-11 of the chromosomes for resistance.Recent genetic testing has shown that Chinese chestnut needs 8-11 genes for blight resistance. T
Hey. I think you live close. I am in northern Potter Co, PA near Coudersport. Going to the meeting next Saturday?
. Good stuff. I think you mean it needs specific genes from 8-11 of the c. mollissima chromosomes.
Yup, I am going. Tully is only 45 minutes from me. Will you be there?
I think the anti-GMO stuff is like a religion, and it will just be impossible to persuade some people.
Very much agreed,...even with the best data and best science they will not change. They have closed their mind in this area and their opinion is based on their feelings. But I bet they use google everyday and let google sell their usage data because they don't even understand that either.
I want to go but my son has an event in southern PA. I am just not sure I can make it. Can you take good notes for me and share?
how do you figure that Dunstans are mostly Chinese? I thought common conventional knowledge said they were 15 parts American, One part Chinese? I picked about 15 of my own Dunstans last week and will save about 5 for ploanting, and have 50 more on the way that I ordered as seed. I will be getting these ready for growing, and trying to figure my own cost effective way of getting these going. Hope to put 20 more on my NJ property, and the balance on my NY property. I'll be tree tubing them all.
Ok, read bnack and I gues you mean dunstan is more than the transgeneric, fair enough. I would Love to get on board and do field trials for them, how/ where do I sign up?