Ryan, you are a great teacher! I have been nuturing my few White Oaks for a few years. Several are bigguns and I planted several others. Ya really motivate me to persist in my efforts. Thanks!
@@nbkawtgnobody You are correct about Post Oaks looking like haunted house trees. I still prefer the White Oak though - king of the hardwoods in my opinion.
Very informative! Glad I found your channel. I had no idea about the bats using the bark as a roost. I'm blessed to have a number of white oak on my property in Mississippi. Now I know where my bats likely stay.
Go on BONAP and look up the county map list by genus (on the right side of the page), look for a genus, for example, Quercus (Oaks), and you'll find every damn oak in your county, state, and the entire country with a map for each species. BONAP is a great tool PS: Marines lead the way (;
I have a couple bags of white/swamp white oak acorns in stratification now. Hopefully I can protect them from predation this spring and have at least a handful of seedlings make it.
Good point on why my area only has a few red oaks. Bad forestry habits wiped out the best species. I've been planting several species of oak every few years. My hope is they will spread over the years.
This video id VERY informative and helpful...thank you for that...I have a White oak on my property and I have been wondering how to propagate more, thank you for this video!
I found a 5 foot oak under a bunch of japanese honeysuckle vines, horrible plants smothering small trees, I freed the oak I dont know how long it was under there but I expect next year it will finally grow into a large tree with rapid growth has full sunshine too, hope it shades out all the japanese honeysuckles
Yes you do. Go on BONAP and look up the county map list by genus (on the right side of the page), look for Quercus (Oaks), and you'll find every damn oak in your county, state, and the entire country lol, it's a great tool The genus Quercus (Oaks) only has one subgenus in the western hemisphere, also name Quercus. The Quercus subgenus is divided into sections, the vastly predominant sections in the western hemisphere are section Quercus (White Oaks) and section Lobatae (red oaks) Yes, it's Quercus quercus quercus (Genus subgenus section), rediculous.
Clarification: Quercus alba are "white oaks" but the section quercus are the white oaks (including Quercus alba). California does not have Quercus alba (the species), but they have section quercus (the white oaks). Sorry I was thinking section in my first comment This is exactly why it's good to learn the "binomial nomenclature" (2 part name), meaning genus (always capitalized) and species (always lowercase), for example: Quercus alba (the species "white oak") is genus Quercus (oaks) and the species alba. Quercus bicolor (swamp white oak), Quercus stellata (post oak), etc
I work for a millwork company, over the last 6 months there has been a 40% increase in the price of white oak. It's trending with interior designers because you can apply a wirebrush and ceruse finish. Barrel makers have contributed by purchasing all available inventory. You predicted this year's ago.
I’ve noticed there’s different phenotypes of white oak, that look a lot like burr oak. Leaves with small lobes, very furrowed bark with deep ridges. They can be tricky. This tree is an example of classic white oak.
Even though I’m a California native, who loves our version of prickly leaf oak trees that define our coastal grassland hills, I like to consider, from San Francisco to Santa Barbara; I came upon this video after listening to a TED talk and a few other videos regarding the de-extinction project of passenger pigeons that were historically symbiotic with the white oak trees, along with the historically native red wolves as deer predators to chase them, and keep them on the run that could all give white oak trees a chance with that native ecosystem. Otherwise, maybe prescribed burns and well-managed deer hunting could help, unless you East coasters know more about these trees than I do.
Great video, I feel like I should join a class! I just purchased a Mexican White Oak for Zone 7 and wanted to find information on this. Is this information relevant as well to that tree?
Thank you!! Mexican white oak, Quercus polymorpha, is a different species that I know very little about! It's quite different from Quercus alba, though. I'd recommend checking out this or another similar resource for more info: texastreeid.tamu.edu/content/TreeDetails/?id=105 Happy planting!
I found a couple of whites that grow huge acorns- like quarter sized n with the caps on canb as big as a ping pong ball. Said to b a burr variety but haven’t seen any other comparable in size. I have a few of them which r starting to produce acorns but have to fight off squirrels but they r the big ones. Really would like to know what it is that/why the acorns are so big/ huge almost walnut sized??
This is the most underrated band ever! I saw these guys in Pamona back in ‘68. Those were good times. Today’s music can’t hold a candle to the bands from the 60’s. Every time I hear this song I think of my father. I miss him terribly. Peace to all.
Im a hobbyist woodworker I'm building a new bed. For my wife and I out of quarter sawn white oak. 15$ a board foot in my area. Walnut and Quarter sawn white oak are the big hitters in bespoke furniture.
Range is often a great place to start with plant identification. If you're in the woods in the eastern US, it's highly unlikely that you'll come upon an English oak (Q. robur). I don't know English oak very well but I recommend comparing the bark; white oak has quite distinctive colored and shaped bark, especially with the shaggy plates on upper branches. English oak has darker grey bark which splits into ridges and furrows as the tree ages, rather than flaky plates. Hope that helps!
You may be able to grow one, but we strongly recommend only planting species which are native to your region. Introducing a species can result in unintended negative ecological consequences, whether that means the spread of the species or the introduction of plant pests that can be devastating (for example, the American chestnut nearly went extinct due to a fungal infection brought to North America on Chinese chestnut rootstock)
Don’t leave young saplings unprotected,they will get eaten by rabbits and deers because it’s leaves have a sweet taste so put a little fence around them for about 20 years.
I don't think so! "Mast cycles" can vary widely from species to species, and have more to do with throwing off predators (squirrels, turkeys, deer, etc) than environmental factors.
Good question!! The bark strips themselves are usually attached at one side (thinking about it without looking at any trees, it may usually be the left side of the bark strip that remains attached) and peel off on the other. The entire trunk will have shaggy bark all the way around though, formed from all the bark plates which peel on one side. I hope that makes sense!!
Someone please help, I have a family treasure red oak maybe 150 years old and straight and beautiful directly in the front of my walkway, brilliant….. my dilemma, although the tree acts and looks healthy there’s a lot of ant climbing and for the past couple of years, a giant chicken of the woods mushroom by it base. My wife had used wood chips at base…. I’ve heard that the delicacy mushroom means my tree is dying; please someone help with info, please!!!
Thank you for your help sir . I'm from Oklahoma 32 and 3rd Gen owner of the very ground my pa cleared 40 archers with an axe and a pick all by hand power but I still have a lot of wood so I'm trying to do right by my pa . 11 walnuts as well but pa told me they ain't to be touched unless a emergency cuz one could pay taxes and if there still standing he said he can die happy knowing his grand kids and great grand kids will always have a home so that's how I intend to leave it . But if there's a giant white oak it's worth way more as a log than wait for it to die and burn it for heat so mutch abliged to yasir
I’m always confused when we talk about mast years being a way to keep populations from exploding when eastern North America used to have chestnuts prolifically producing even more nutritious nuts every year. Reading early settler texts we do see that there were just incredible populations of squirrels and turkeys and bears and buffalos etc etc. We’ve decimated the ecosystem so badly in North America in such a way that I wonder if we can even really define ecological systems with any sort of certainty. It seems the systems we’re studying now are systems in flux reacting to the landscape that has been so widely changed by humans. But to be fair I’m no scientist, I’m just a barista with a side passion for trees. 🤷🏻♂️
Hey I really liked this video and I am currently on a wildlife team for my school and I am studying these trees and I would like for you to do a video on post oaks
Whiskey? Bourbon. There’s about 11.5 million barrels of bourbon compared to 4.5 million people in KY. That industry needs all the white oak it can get.
The genus Quercus (Oaks) only has one subgenus in the western hemisphere, also name Quercus. The Quercus subgenus is divided into sections, the vastly predominant sections in the western hemisphere are section Quercus (White Oaks) and section Lobatae (red oaks) Yes, it's Quercus quercus quercus (Genus subgenus section), rediculous.
You didn't mention insect predation like spongy moths (gypsy moths). I just lost two large white oaks to them. If you've never experienced a spongy month invasion I can tell you it is truly Biblical in scope. They are HORRIBLE.
Many thanks! You've helped me understand the ancient white oak in the wood next to me. It's impressively tall and some 13-feet in diameter, but also showing its years. You've also helped me see how to extend its life and to create some thriving descendants in the forest around it. It's in the middle of a small woodland in an increasingly built-up college town, so the threat of invasives such as laurels, kudzu, English ivy, wisteria and magnolias clutter the wood and make the growth of a new generation of white oaks difficult. I've already transplanted two to sunnier locations and need to do more.
I had a white oak as a kid that was over 500 years old. Giant tree, about 7 feet in diameter and over 150 feet tall. Gorgeous tree.
Ryan, you are a great teacher! I have been nuturing my few White Oaks for a few years. Several are bigguns and I planted several others. Ya really motivate me to persist in my efforts. Thanks!
I wouldn't mind an extended video about white oaks. They've always been a favorite tree of mine. Really great delivery too!
I perfer Post Oak; older living, more fire-resistant, and if you prune it right on a good site, looks like a haunted house tree.
@@nbkawtgnobody You are correct about Post Oaks looking like haunted house trees. I still prefer the White Oak though - king of the hardwoods in my opinion.
So refreshing to see a video like this, you clearly know your stuff!
I see your little beagle at the end there! Was wondering where he was this time!
Your videos are always looked forward to and appreciated. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and enthusiasm.
Very informative! Glad I found your channel. I had no idea about the bats using the bark as a roost. I'm blessed to have a number of white oak on my property in Mississippi. Now I know where my bats likely stay.
Thank you. Good information.
Awesome man, good fact about the bats. In my eyes it’s a treasure to our forests right behind the near extinct American chestnut.
I could watch this dude talk about trees all day.
Great educational videos...appreciate the insight & connecting the importance of nature to people
Thank you!
Go on BONAP and look up the county map list by genus (on the right side of the page), look for a genus, for example, Quercus (Oaks), and you'll find every damn oak in your county, state, and the entire country with a map for each species. BONAP is a great tool
PS: Marines lead the way (;
Another great video - thank you - much appreciated!
Great video very informative
Thanks Newt. Always enjoy your videos. That Ryan fella's pretty good too. ;)
Perfect Latin name pronunce: Quercus alba. Bravissimo. I'm Italian.
This video was awesome! Super informational and a great study tool! Thanks!
Excellent video. Thanks for the education and I think your recommendations related to white oak and its regeneration are right on.
Excellent presentation
I have a couple bags of white/swamp white oak acorns in stratification now. Hopefully I can protect them from predation this spring and have at least a handful of seedlings make it.
White Oak is top notch firewood. Very high BTU and easy splitting.
Good point on why my area only has a few red oaks. Bad forestry habits wiped out the best species. I've been planting several species of oak every few years. My hope is they will spread over the years.
This video id VERY informative and helpful...thank you for that...I have a White oak on my property and I have been wondering how to propagate more, thank you for this video!
I found a 5 foot oak under a bunch of japanese honeysuckle vines, horrible plants smothering small trees, I freed the oak I dont know how long it was under there but I expect next year it will finally grow into a large tree with rapid growth has full sunshine too, hope it shades out all the japanese honeysuckles
That honeysuckle, good winter food source
Love it!
Thanks dude!
We don't have white oak here in California (I think), but we have magnificent valley oaks which I believe are related.
Yes you do. Go on BONAP and look up the county map list by genus (on the right side of the page), look for Quercus (Oaks), and you'll find every damn oak in your county, state, and the entire country lol, it's a great tool
The genus Quercus (Oaks) only has one subgenus in the western hemisphere, also name Quercus.
The Quercus subgenus is divided into sections, the vastly predominant sections in the western hemisphere are section Quercus (White Oaks) and section Lobatae (red oaks)
Yes, it's Quercus quercus quercus (Genus subgenus section), rediculous.
Clarification: Quercus alba are "white oaks" but the section quercus are the white oaks (including Quercus alba). California does not have Quercus alba (the species), but they have section quercus (the white oaks). Sorry I was thinking section in my first comment
This is exactly why it's good to learn the "binomial nomenclature" (2 part name), meaning genus (always capitalized) and species (always lowercase), for example: Quercus alba (the species "white oak") is genus Quercus (oaks) and the species alba. Quercus bicolor (swamp white oak), Quercus stellata (post oak), etc
I work for a millwork company, over the last 6 months there has been a 40% increase in the price of white oak. It's trending with interior designers because you can apply a wirebrush and ceruse finish. Barrel makers have contributed by purchasing all available inventory. You predicted this year's ago.
Find a big Burr oak, over a dry creek bed. That’s the setup !
I’ve noticed there’s different phenotypes of white oak, that look a lot like burr oak. Leaves with small lobes, very furrowed bark with deep ridges. They can be tricky. This tree is an example of classic white oak.
Chestnut Oak probably the name my man.
Or chinkapin oak.
Pls do a video of all the different white and red oaks in the eastern United States.
We'll get to em all eventually!
Even though I’m a California native, who loves our version of prickly leaf oak trees that define our coastal grassland hills, I like to consider, from San Francisco to Santa Barbara; I came upon this video after listening to a TED talk and a few other videos regarding the de-extinction project of passenger pigeons that were historically symbiotic with the white oak trees, along with the historically native red wolves as deer predators to chase them, and keep them on the run that could all give white oak trees a chance with that native ecosystem. Otherwise, maybe prescribed burns and well-managed deer hunting could help, unless you East coasters know more about these trees than I do.
Great video, I feel like I should join a class! I just purchased a Mexican White Oak for Zone 7 and wanted to find information on this. Is this information relevant as well to that tree?
Thank you!!
Mexican white oak, Quercus polymorpha, is a different species that I know very little about! It's quite different from Quercus alba, though. I'd recommend checking out this or another similar resource for more info: texastreeid.tamu.edu/content/TreeDetails/?id=105
Happy planting!
@@forestsforthebay4784 Thank you so much for the response!
That looks like a beautifully large Kalmia latifolia begins you in this video!
Great video and agree with everything he said.
I have a large Red oak near my house ,looks healty ,maybe 80 years old???
I found a couple of whites that grow huge acorns- like quarter sized n with the caps on canb as big as a ping pong ball. Said to b a burr variety but haven’t seen any other comparable in size. I have a few of them which r starting to produce acorns but have to fight off squirrels but they r the big ones. Really would like to know what it is that/why the acorns are so big/ huge almost walnut sized??
This is the most underrated band ever! I saw these guys in Pamona back in ‘68. Those were good times. Today’s music can’t hold a candle to the bands from the 60’s. Every time I hear this song I think of my father. I miss him terribly. Peace to all.
What?
Does black truffle grow under white oaks
Knower of Oak
Do white oak grow in Wyoming?
Im a hobbyist woodworker I'm building a new bed. For my wife and I out of quarter sawn white oak. 15$ a board foot in my area. Walnut and Quarter sawn white oak are the big hitters in bespoke furniture.
its hard to tell a english oak apart from a white oak, or can someone explain the difference?
Range is often a great place to start with plant identification. If you're in the woods in the eastern US, it's highly unlikely that you'll come upon an English oak (Q. robur). I don't know English oak very well but I recommend comparing the bark; white oak has quite distinctive colored and shaped bark, especially with the shaggy plates on upper branches. English oak has darker grey bark which splits into ridges and furrows as the tree ages, rather than flaky plates. Hope that helps!
I wished i could post pic of mine here
Can someone please answer me this burning question? Can a white oak tree be (imported and) grown in Ireland? Thanks in advance!
You may be able to grow one, but we strongly recommend only planting species which are native to your region. Introducing a species can result in unintended negative ecological consequences, whether that means the spread of the species or the introduction of plant pests that can be devastating (for example, the American chestnut nearly went extinct due to a fungal infection brought to North America on Chinese chestnut rootstock)
awesome video thanks dude
Deer like White Oak acorns.
Don’t leave young saplings unprotected,they will get eaten by rabbits and deers because it’s leaves have a sweet taste so put a little fence around them for about 20 years.
Is there any veracity to the assumption that oaks make more acorns when a hard winter is predicted?
I don't think so! "Mast cycles" can vary widely from species to species, and have more to do with throwing off predators (squirrels, turkeys, deer, etc) than environmental factors.
Which side of the tree does white oak bark usually peel from?
Good question!! The bark strips themselves are usually attached at one side (thinking about it without looking at any trees, it may usually be the left side of the bark strip that remains attached) and peel off on the other. The entire trunk will have shaggy bark all the way around though, formed from all the bark plates which peel on one side. I hope that makes sense!!
Someone please help, I have a family treasure red oak maybe 150 years old and straight and beautiful directly in the front of my walkway, brilliant….. my dilemma, although the tree acts and looks healthy there’s a lot of ant climbing and for the past couple of years, a giant chicken of the woods mushroom by it base. My wife had used wood chips at base…. I’ve heard that the delicacy mushroom means my tree is dying; please someone help with info, please!!!
YOU have a warty cap!
Thank you for your help sir . I'm from Oklahoma 32 and 3rd Gen owner of the very ground my pa cleared 40 archers with an axe and a pick all by hand power but I still have a lot of wood so I'm trying to do right by my pa . 11 walnuts as well but pa told me they ain't to be touched unless a emergency cuz one could pay taxes and if there still standing he said he can die happy knowing his grand kids and great grand kids will always have a home so that's how I intend to leave it . But if there's a giant white oak it's worth way more as a log than wait for it to die and burn it for heat so mutch abliged to yasir
I just got into home brewing , I think I found a white oak the other day that I can get some wood off for ageing alcohol
I’m always confused when we talk about mast years being a way to keep populations from exploding when eastern North America used to have chestnuts prolifically producing even more nutritious nuts every year. Reading early settler texts we do see that there were just incredible populations of squirrels and turkeys and bears and buffalos etc etc. We’ve decimated the ecosystem so badly in North America in such a way that I wonder if we can even really define ecological systems with any sort of certainty. It seems the systems we’re studying now are systems in flux reacting to the landscape that has been so widely changed by humans. But to be fair I’m no scientist, I’m just a barista with a side passion for trees. 🤷🏻♂️
مرحبا. هل تصبح الجوزة شجرة كبيرة بعد ١٠ سنوات؟
Hey I really liked this video and I am currently on a wildlife team for my school and I am studying these trees and I would like for you to do a video on post oaks
Whiskey? Bourbon. There’s about 11.5 million barrels of bourbon compared to 4.5 million people in KY. That industry needs all the white oak it can get.
The genus Quercus (Oaks) only has one subgenus in the western hemisphere, also name Quercus.
The Quercus subgenus is divided into sections, the vastly predominant sections in the western hemisphere are section Quercus (White Oaks) and section Lobatae (red oaks)
Yes, it's Quercus quercus quercus (Genus subgenus section), rediculous.
You didn't mention insect predation like spongy moths (gypsy moths). I just lost two large white oaks to them. If you've never experienced a spongy month invasion I can tell you it is truly Biblical in scope. They are HORRIBLE.
they usually can survive the spongy moths for a few years and recover but they loose all their leaves they just get new leaves next year
at least that happens with my white oaks just make sure their not stressed also the outbreaks only last a few years
Are the spongy moths invasive, or are they native without their predators keeping them in check?
comments allowed on an educational dendrology video? 😛 please use comments responsibly
lol jk. nice video
Many thanks! You've helped me understand the ancient white oak in the wood next to me. It's impressively tall and some 13-feet in diameter, but also showing its years.
You've also helped me see how to extend its life and to create some thriving descendants in the forest around it. It's in the middle of a small woodland in an increasingly built-up college town, so the threat of invasives such as laurels, kudzu, English ivy, wisteria and magnolias clutter the wood and make the growth of a new generation of white oaks difficult. I've already transplanted two to sunnier locations and need to do more.