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Burnt Ridge Nursery
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 20 ก.ค. 2020
If you like these short videos, check out our longer feature videos about growing fruit and nuts for lots more detailed information: www.burntridgenursery.com/Out-Standing-In-His-Field-of-Fruit-Video/productinfo/VD1-OUTST/
Burnt Ridge Nursery and Orchards is a family-owned farm, in business since 1980. Our 20-acre farm is located in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains with a beautiful view of Mount St. Helens. Our mail order nursery specializes in unusual and disease resistant trees, vines, and shrubs that produce edible nuts or fruits. We also have a large selection of Northwest native plants and ornamental and useful landscape trees. We send nice sized, healthy, well-rooted plant material. The varieties we carry have done well in our orchards. If you have questions, please feel free to call, write or email us. We can help you make appropriate choices for your growing area.
Burnt Ridge Nursery and Orchards is a family-owned farm, in business since 1980. Our 20-acre farm is located in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains with a beautiful view of Mount St. Helens. Our mail order nursery specializes in unusual and disease resistant trees, vines, and shrubs that produce edible nuts or fruits. We also have a large selection of Northwest native plants and ornamental and useful landscape trees. We send nice sized, healthy, well-rooted plant material. The varieties we carry have done well in our orchards. If you have questions, please feel free to call, write or email us. We can help you make appropriate choices for your growing area.
Beaked Hazelnut: A West Coast Native Nut Tree That Ripens in the Summer
Corylus cornuta is a hazelnut species native to the west coast of North America and produces small, edible nuts surrounded by a beak-shaped husk. Here in the Pacific Northwest, they ripen in July, and we harvest them by hand to grow the seeds in our nursery.
มุมมอง: 556
วีดีโอ
How to propagate trees by chip budding in late summer
มุมมอง 15K2 หลายเดือนก่อน
Chip budding is a common way to propagate fruit trees in late summer or early fall. We take fresh cuttings from this year's growth on a parent tree, and splice a "chip" with a single dormant bud into an existing rootstock. The following year, new growth will emerge at the beginning of the growing season. Any rootstock growth is cut off to allow the bud from the desired variety to grow into a wh...
Stool Beds: How to propagate hazelnuts and other trees clonally on their own roots
มุมมอง 7K4 หลายเดือนก่อน
You can propagate hazelnuts, chestnuts, and many other kinds of trees using stool beds! We use this method for clonal propagation, creating "self-rooted" trees, similar to layering. The resulting nursery stock is true to the named variety, and will be quick to produce nuts (or fruit) - unlike trees grown from seed. Since they are on their own roots, there is no risk of graft failure or incompat...
How to grow and harvest hazelnuts (filberts) at home, successfully!
มุมมอง 86Kปีที่แล้ว
Growing hazelnuts (filberts) at home or on a small farm can be easy, but it's different from how it's done on large commercial nut orchards. We grow our hazelnuts as multi-stemmed bushes, not as trees with a single trunk. This allows us to harvest them by hand as soon as they are ripe, before the jays and squirrels have a chance to strip the trees. Unlike other nuts, hazelnuts ripen in summer, ...
A simple, organic way to control orchard pests
มุมมอง 3.6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Apple maggot, codling moth larvae, and other insect pests can be difficult to manage , especially in an organic orchard. Michael shares a simple trick that you can use whether you have one backyard fruit tree or a whole orchard!
Aronia: The amazing superfood that is easy to grow!
มุมมอง 23K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Aronia melanocarpa ("black chokeberry") is a hardy perennial shrub that produces loads of berries filled with antioxidants! They are very easy to grow, and have great fall foliage color on top of it all. Plant an aronia shrub in your yard and start exploring all the great ways to use these excellent, underappreciated fruits. We offer both seedlings and named cultivars propagated from cuttings: ...
Planting Trees, Part 2: Hardwoods | with Michael Dolan
มุมมอง 1.9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Michael Dolan has planted hundreds of thousands of trees over the last several decades, including a 20 acre diverse orchard of fruit trees, nut trees, berry bushes, and fruiting vines. In this video, part 2 in a series on planting, he discusses and demonstrates methods for successful planting of hardwood trees, suitable for fruit trees, nut trees, and many ornamentals. He discusses nutrients, o...
Planting Trees, Part 1: Conifers | with Michael Dolan of Burnt Ridge Nursery
มุมมอง 9292 ปีที่แล้ว
Michael Dolan has planted hundreds of thousands of trees over the last several decades. In this video, part 1 in a series on planting, he discusses and demonstrates methods for successful planting of conifer trees, such as spruce, fir, hemlock, and cedar. These methods are great for forestry or ecological restoration projects, when planting large numbers of trees as quickly as possible. When pl...
Wintergreen: A beautiful and versatile edible groundcover
มุมมอง 17K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens) is an evergreen groundcover native to the northeastern US. The leaves and berries are edible and have a strong, distinctive flavor that is familiar to many people. They can be used in teas, herbal medicine, and as a natural breath freshener. They thrive in acidic soils rich in organic material, and are a great addition to ornamental and edible landscape gardens.
Autumn Olive: Friend or Foe?
มุมมอง 29K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Autumn olive (Elaeagnus umbellata) is a beneficial but controversial species. In the video, Michael Dolan explains why we grow it, how we use the fruit, and whether he thinks the benefits outweigh its invasive potential. Like other nitrogen fixing shrubs, autumn olive has great potential for use in permaculture and agroforestry systems, and as a companion plant for nut orchards. In addition, th...
Kakai: A pumpkin with nutritious, "naked" seeds
มุมมอง 3.2K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Michael explains why Kakai pumpkins are his favorite vegetable. These versatile pumpkins have great flavor, and are full of hull-less, "naked" seeds, which are great for roasting and packed with nutrition. Seeds for growing your own Kakai pumpkins are available through Burnt Ridge Nursery: www.burntridgenursery.com/KAKAI-NAKED-PUMPKIN-SEED/productinfo/SDPKKAK/
What to Know About Harvesting Chestnuts
มุมมอง 141K3 ปีที่แล้ว
One of our favorite times year is when the chestnuts are ripe! Michael Dolan shows several methods for harvesting chestnuts, and explains the differences between several varieties.
Gevuina avellana: A Chilean Nut Tree for Temperate Climates
มุมมอง 2.2K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Chilean nut, Gevuina avellana, is a broadleaf evergreen tree related to macadamia nut but hardy to 0 degrees F. It produces a delicious nut similar to hazelnut or macadamia, and can be grown in temperate areas as cold as zone 7. Its decorative foliage, gorgeous flowers, eye-catching red fruits, and tasty nuts make Chilean nut tree an excellent addition to any garden, orchard, or edible landscape!
Harvesting Black Elderberries in Late Summer
มุมมอง 1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Elderberries are renowned for their excellent flavor and medicinal qualities, and have been used for making wines, preserves, syrups, and tinctures for hundreds of years. We’re beginning to harvest our American black elderberries (Sambucus canadensis) at this time of year. In this video, Michael talks about our elderberry bushes and how we pick the fruit.
Turkish Tree Hazel: A Beautiful Tree with Edible Nuts!
มุมมอง 4.1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Turkish tree hazel in a large, non-suckering hazel tree with a beautiful form. It can be used as a rootstock for grafting other hazelnut varieties, or grown for its ornamental qualities and small, edible nuts which it bears in very unique-looking husks.
How to Graft Chestnuts and Other Nut Trees
มุมมอง 10K3 ปีที่แล้ว
How to Graft Chestnuts and Other Nut Trees
How to mulch fruit trees with amazing results
มุมมอง 23K3 ปีที่แล้ว
How to mulch fruit trees with amazing results
How to tell when apples are ready to harvest
มุมมอง 13K4 ปีที่แล้ว
How to tell when apples are ready to harvest
Akane apple trees: an excellent choice for the home grower
มุมมอง 4.8K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Akane apple trees: an excellent choice for the home grower
Harvesting Kiwi Berries with Michael Dolan
มุมมอง 19K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Harvesting Kiwi Berries with Michael Dolan
Yakumo Asian pears are a great addition to any orchard
มุมมอง 3.1K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Yakumo Asian pears are a great addition to any orchard
Italian prune plums, an old homestead necessity
มุมมอง 13K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Italian prune plums, an old homestead necessity
Desert King, a reliable and delicious fig for the Pacific Northwest
มุมมอง 23K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Desert King, a reliable and delicious fig for the Pacific Northwest
Green Gage plum, a French fruit with a long history and rich flavor
มุมมอง 9K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Green Gage plum, a French fruit with a long history and rich flavor
Harvesting American black elderberries in late summer
มุมมอง 3.8K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Harvesting American black elderberries in late summer
Very informative. Thank you sir.
How pollinate one tree.
❤
Just discovered your TH-cam, really awesome. I’m thinking about attempting some grafting next Spring. How long do/can you keep the grafts in the tree pots?
Great info, thank you. Also, how large should a fruit tree be before taking a scion from it?
Thank you for the good info! This is what I wanted to know.
Very informative..... Thank You
Deers ate mine to the ground 😢
Very nice
These are my favorites
so interesting 😮❤
Great video. I always viewed them as negative and invasive. Now I can enjoy them and eat them every fall. Thank you
I learned a lot from you…thanks!
We have tons of them all over our property, the steller jays love them! We recently purchased and planted a Mcdonald and Yamhil hazelnut trees from you! We can't wait to watch them grow 😊
Does it pollinate the cultivated Hazelnut varieties?
Generally not. While the pollen is compatible, it is released at different times.
@@burntridgenursery591 So I have 2 plants that were supposedly native beaked hazels that I bought from a local native plant nursery and planted as 1 gallon plants 3 years ago. One of them is twice as tall as the other, the shorter one is forming catkins this year and dropping its leaves earlier while the other one isn't yet (leaves have turned but are still on, and no catkins yet). There are also some subtle differences in the leaves, the taller one has bigger leaves with less pointed tips. Is it normal for them to have this much variability or do you think it's possible that one of my plants is a different type of hazel. It sounds like you don't think hybrids are possible between the native beaked and cultivated hazels (I thought maybe I had a hybrid).
How do you grow it so abundantly. I had to buy like 4 batches of roots to get 2 little patches going. It has like 20 plants total after maybe 2 years. Never had any luck starting from seed. Tried cold stratifying and it still took foreverr to germinate. Died about a month later before growing past seedling stage
I've never tried growing them from seed. For this species, we obtain small starts from a lab that grows them clonally through a process called tissue culture. Then we grow them in larger pots. Having the right type of soil is very important - they need an acidic soil that is high in organic material, mimicking their natural forest floor habitat. For your planting area, I would recommend mulching heavily with wood chips, dead leaves, straw, or other organic material. This keeps the weeds down, and over time it breaks down into the exact type of moist, organic humus that wintergreen prefers.
<<Bows Low to a New Mentor>> Thanks for sharing
From which country you are
They are USA, Western Washington State
I planed a bunch of chestnuts a few days ago. I want to have my own chestnut tree,because the wild chestnuts are always getting cleared out,by other people,as soon as they start to drop.
Any chance it can be grown in a 9a zone like coastal GA?
I have one from your nursery planted in my parents yard! It is doing excellent
Fights cancer.
Dont mix it up with honey suckle berry!
Great video! I've got 44 chinese chestnut trees that are mature, and while I can roller up many, I still have to use a fruit basket to pull down the opening burrs before they drop their nuts when I'm not around and the deer are, so I am regularly opening the burrs. Can you recommend any double layer leather gloves? I find that even thick welder's gloves get easily penetrated by the spines on burrs. Thanks again!
Having a couple of varieties, the golden ones work out the best, seeming sweeter and all. Getting 17 times the lycopene is a positive.
Nice presentation, we have a 60 acre chestnut tree farm in Northern MI with a mixed variety of trees as well. We've tried some Dunstan but have a number of Hybrid American trees successfully growing as well as Bouche de Bétizac, Precoce Migoule, Colossal, and Chinese varieties.
Thank you so much!
One acre yields how many kgs of nuts?
So, this is the guy that invented pumkins? Huh, figures.
🥰
I used to eat these berries during the summer and fall seen them grown wild in West Warwick, Rhode Island
Can you also use the leaves for making a tea?
Amazing! Very informative, thank you!! 💕
Found my first autumn olive shrub. So happy
Nice video. Inspiring to keep going in my own work. I wonder if you’ve ever have tried willow water as a rooting enhancement. I had the idea while watching that the water could be poured on as a top dressing after the girdle and mound is in place.
Most stylish nurseryman on YT
Love Burnt Ridge Nursery
Thanks for the video. Nice clear instructions. BTW, the apple trees and sweet chestnut trees I mail ordered from you are doing great! Cheers
My chestnut opened up today and I have no idea where are the nuts!
All the info I was looking for. And the rain made this a very peaceful video. Thanks!
You should focus image on fruits not on speaker
We have Chinese chestnuts and they are relatively small trees compared to yours. We've always picked them pretty quickly but no matter what, if we leave them out without roasting or boiling they will get buggy. Is their anyway to avoid this??
Where is a good source of root stocks? Do you also grow those, cut and sell them?
We sell rootstocks for most commonly grafted fruit trees, available to preorder here: www.burntridgenursery.com/Rootstock/products/98/. Shipping starts in winter and continues through spring, depending on where you live.
@@burntridgenursery591 thank you! Will be ordering once harvest season slows down :)
So after they rot, then where?
What do I use for root stock? I would like to try this with some Bartlett pears I have.
For pears you''ll want to use any pear (Pyrus) rootstock. We often use OHxF 87, OHxF 333, Pyrus ussuriensis, Pyrus betulaefolia, or Pyrus communis. You can also graft to quince rootstock for a more dwarfing effect.
Seems like the tree would break at bud area once it grows tall.
On the contrary, the grafted area heals very quickly. Within one growing season, the graft union is typically just as strong as any other part of the tree. If part of the area fails to heal quickly, applying tree paint or wax to the affected area can help protect it and encourage quick healing.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge! I have subscribed.
Thank you for showing us how to make a budstick
How do you tell the time of year to do chip budding in a given location?? We usually dont have frost here till november but it always drops from 110f highs to around 90f highs and trees start dropping leaves about labor day every year
I'd suggest late Sept / Oct for your area
Can't wait to order more scionwood from you folks for next year. Always a great experience. Always a great product. Keep that thumb green, Mikey D.!