Ya I know! To the north and east of the lake we hunt, the area is jammed with them. just not where we are.
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Are you talking about Pritchard?
Roe+
the oaks at mom and dads grow on the rim of deep gullys .we have a lot of them and thy are very big trees ,Thy are growing along the top of the gullys all around the farm and the farms next to us for miles ,,thy had the best year last that I have ever seen more acorns then we could keep swept up with the tractor and sweeper ,,tons of them ,,I will get a pic of the leaves up soon Dutch
http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/k...8/DSCF3473.jpg
here are the trees I transplanted .thy have been in the pots for a few weeks now ,so what kind of oak are thy ,,,Dutch
Look like white oaks to me.
I agree, White Oak. The first leaves to sprout on my white oak seedlings look the same as yours. As the tree grows you should see the leaf take on more shape, on mine the second branch down usually shows more typical white oak features of rounded lobes and a deeper v section between the lobes.
Your plants look quite healthy, keep doing what you already doing and I think you will have some nice seedlings to plant.
thanks I got a dozen left just like the ones in the pic ,what do I do with them come late fall .or should I plant them before freeze up ,Dutch
That's a good question, I have read the best time to plant is spring or fall when the tree is dormant but I will be planting mine throughout the year as I can only get to my hunting spots occasionally so I do not have much choice. After saying that, when I did landscaping years ago we planted most of our trees in the summer and they did fine as long as: 1. the roots do not get exposed to the air, and 2. they get watered regularly until the tap root develops.
I would definitely use some form of protection from deer grazing.
Here is a pic of an Oak planted in 1965 with no protection (http://www.hastingsreserve.org/OakStory/Deer2.html):
http://www.hastingsreserve.org/OakSt...s/BonsaiQD.jpg
I have got chicken wire around some smaller saplings but as they grow I will be replacing that with tree tubes. I took tomato frames turned them upside down and wrapped in chicken wire, an idea I got from the internet (on the right):
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-P1khm2021V...ermarked+2.jpg
Burr Oaks are the only big oak trees in the Northwest.
They grow well along shorelines like the Rainy River.
But they also grow well in many areas in the clay soils of division 10.
There is about 10 acres dominated by oak on the south end of my property.
Does it help deer hunting? Probably not.
It seems bears are the main big game animal that eats acorns in the fall.