Planted A Few Trees.

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The galvanized nails are a better choice, just make sure they are sharp to start with, no spikes. The location is the big problem in tree selection. I want fruit and citrus but until I finally select my growing area, I can't select the best tree's. Big temp difference for 1 to 2,000 feet above seal lever and 5 or 6,000 feet above sea level. The low desert allows longer grow seasons and defense visibility (mountain / hill top compound) but the upper / high desert offers fire wood and more hunting animals / food. The price of the land is fairly close in price, so again it just comes down to my making a choice. Waffle, waffle.
 
does anyone have autumn olive planted or have access to them?
 
Last winter I ran across a way to grow trees along a wall or trained into almost a hedge. I looked through this thread and can't find it and I don't where else to look. I don't even remember what they call it. I would like to try it with my orchard so as to keep the trees low enough to pick from without a ladder. Any help would be appreciated.
@Caribou at Mount Vernon near DC, the garden had fruit trees growing by the espalier method, so beautiful. I was getting ready to mention it and saw your question (and successive answers). Espalier trains a tree against a wall or trellis, branched out in a pattern. Strange that it would still produce, to me.
 
Just planted 6 Chestnut and 4 Persimmon trees. Have 6 White Fingertree's and 25 Goumi coming in the next weeks and some Red Mulberry......
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@Dutchs ...Edit... I thought I should add... I know a guy who works for the water department in a small town near me. He said "Sometimes they add extra chlorine to the mix to kill anything growing in the lines"... made sense to me.

I respectfully disagree. How much Chlorine is added to drinking water (residual) is regulated at the State level. A Small Town that has "growing in the lines" mentality has operator problems. Also Chlorine is a gas and will evaporate, I wouldn't understand how any Chlorine could make it to the roots. If Chlorinated water kills foliage then wouldn't everyone who used it to sprinkle their lawns or wash their vehicles have brown grass?
 
I HAD two apple trees in the back. Both got wiped out during hurricanes one a few years ago and the other one last year. We had planted them the first year we moved here and the last one had just started producing pretty well. Now I'm down to 3 mayhaws, 2 pear, 1 pecan, 2 lemon, 1 orange & 2 dewberries. Oh I forgot the fig tree that was here the first couple years. got split in half after a hurricane and eventually died.
I miss having dewberries. They grew wild along the irrigation ditches in South/Central Tx.
 
You can have my Dewberries, they grow wild in my garden & I dig them out every year.:(:mad::confused::eek:

Its gonna be a while before I can plant anything. I have to get moved and then build a bear, elk, deer, rabbit, hog proof garden fence.
 
@Dutchs the trees look really healthy and good on you for planting so many :) .

@Terri9630 we will join you in building fences around the garden beds as we still have to do that before we start the garden beds due to the kangaroos and cockatoos here and I believe we have deer here too but haven't seen one yet. The water restrictions being at the severe water restrictions of 120 lt per person per day will be a challenge for getting the garden beds going too.
 
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