LaurenRitz
Almost Self-Reliant
When I sold my old house, digging up all my trees and bringing them with me was unfortunately not an option.
I bought this house less than 2 years ago, three acres of grass with a house, and immediately started planting trees.
Not bare-root "varietal" grafted trees, but my own seeds. Most of the survivors went in the ground last spring.
What I'm looking for are not just trees with good fruit, but trees that actually thrive here. I want strong, locally adapted landraces that can adapt to local weather, local pests, and my own idiosyncracies.
Winter survivors were 5 peaches and 5 apricots--I thought 4 and 4, but two more sprouted this week. The first year is hardest for seedlings, so I don't expect a high survival rate.
Seeds from existing sweet cherry trees are so inbred that I get maybe 1 in 10 germination rate and many of those are mutated. Three survived to be put in the ground, and the one that survived last summer didn't make it through the winter.
This spring I replanted in a different area, with slightly different soil and water. Winners here appear to be apricots
And almonds.
So far, the trees that seem to be thriving look like small bushes, which is what I want. I think they'll survive the constant wind better.
About half the seedlings seem to have this form.
I bought this house less than 2 years ago, three acres of grass with a house, and immediately started planting trees.
Not bare-root "varietal" grafted trees, but my own seeds. Most of the survivors went in the ground last spring.
What I'm looking for are not just trees with good fruit, but trees that actually thrive here. I want strong, locally adapted landraces that can adapt to local weather, local pests, and my own idiosyncracies.
Winter survivors were 5 peaches and 5 apricots--I thought 4 and 4, but two more sprouted this week. The first year is hardest for seedlings, so I don't expect a high survival rate.
Seeds from existing sweet cherry trees are so inbred that I get maybe 1 in 10 germination rate and many of those are mutated. Three survived to be put in the ground, and the one that survived last summer didn't make it through the winter.
This spring I replanted in a different area, with slightly different soil and water. Winners here appear to be apricots
And almonds.
So far, the trees that seem to be thriving look like small bushes, which is what I want. I think they'll survive the constant wind better.
About half the seedlings seem to have this form.