Ash Trees from Seed, Part I: Warm Stratification, Method 1
Вставка
- Опубліковано 6 лют 2025
- The first method I'm using to grow ash trees from seed. They require a period of warm stratification, followed by a period of cold stratification. This process shows one method I'm using for warm stratification.
Late to Rise (Feat. yobbzsmokedoutphonk) by Your Friend, Ghost
/ yourfriendghos. .
Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: bit.ly/late-to-...
Music promoted by Audio Library • Late to Rise (Feat. yo...
I had a 80ft ash tree 6 ft from my house , the main bark was 35 inch diameter and just perfect and flawless with the diamond grooves on the bark..
Sent a video to arboretum arborist and he told me to get rid of my ash because it was too close to the house and the deck built around it was not good for the ash tree and it had a slight lean.
I have been miserable without my ash tree and it’s so hot here in southern California that makes me miss my ash tree.
It had a bunch of seedlings and I noticed some are growing here and there , can u take the green seedling and transplant near the stump?
They grind the stump 8inch below soil!!
If I plant these baby seedlings 2ft from the main stump , will it be okay?
I have been shopping around for trees to give me a canopy but they are not native like the Chinese pistache male ,
It won’t help with soil erosion like the ash tree?
Please advise thanks
Hey, I got a bunch of seeds from Sheffield's Seeds! Trying to figure out what warm stratification means...
Hi there. Warm stratification is keeping moist seeds at temperatures around 58 to 68 degrees (or around those temperatures).
See my follow up video for more details.
I live in north east Ohio. The emerald ash borer has killed about 50 or more ash trees on my 4 acres. This year we found 4 EAB resistant trees producing seed. Some of the trees are new growth from damaged trees. But two look as if they are unaffected by EAB. I've been collecting as many seeds as possible.
This is fantastic! You're lucky to have some resistant trees! It sounds like people are cutting a lot of them down trying to get some value out of them. I hate the thought of losing resistant trees in the process.
@@BriansPermacultureProject That is exactly what happened to the chestnut trees in this country. They didn't give them enough time to show resistance. I was just collecting more ash seed today.
The goats love the ash trees, unfortunately they have barked some of the resistant regrowth. That is my fault. But I have enough around that the property can asorb my mistake.
The goats favorite shrub is a rose of Sharon. I have been trying to propagate that as much as possible.
Where do you buy your seeds?
I got some from Scheffields seeds, and also from Schumacher.
Unfortunately Schumacher is out of white ash, which is a species that I was really excited to grow.
I don't think Scheffields has it either.