Community Building 2.0: ask me about drL, the rotational-mob-grazing format for human interactions.
Community Building 2.0: ask me about drL, the rotational-mob-grazing format for human interactions.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Furthering Permaculture next to Lake Ontario.
www.oswego.edu/permaculture
Community Building 2.0: ask me about drL, the rotational-mob-grazing format for human interactions.
gina kansas wrote: Paul - Badgersett Farms - badgersett.com They have seed for planting as well as plants
Community Building 2.0: ask me about drL, the rotational-mob-grazing format for human interactions.
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
Furthering Permaculture next to Lake Ontario.
www.oswego.edu/permaculture
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
Cj Verde wrote:
gina kansas wrote: Paul - Badgersett Farms - badgersett.com They have seed for planting as well as plants
I thought they stopped selling seed. They warned people about fury animals stealing the planted nuts but got too many calls like "Hi, I need more hazelnuts to plant. I planted them all yesterday and now they are all gone."
Vic Johanson
"I must Create a System, or be enslaved by another Man's"--William Blake
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
Cj Verde wrote:Victor, are you going to plant those seeds in the ground or something like the "cone-tainers" that Badgerset uses.
Vic Johanson
"I must Create a System, or be enslaved by another Man's"--William Blake
“You meet your destiny on the road you take to avoid it.”
~ Carl Jung
Come join me at www.peacockorchard.com
Dan Huisjen wrote:The thing that takes all the profit out of hazel nuts is shelling them. If I were to grow them, I'd hope to produce 50-100 pounds of them, shelled. But shelling that many with a hand cracker or small hammer is a non-starter. Anyone know of simple machinery for the task?
Chasing that dream and enjoying every minute of it!
(Usually)
Dan Huisjen wrote:The thing that takes all the profit out of hazel nuts is shelling them. If I were to grow them, I'd hope to produce 50-100 pounds of them, shelled. But shelling that many with a hand cracker or small hammer is a non-starter. Anyone know of simple machinery for the task?
Mary Combs wrote:
Dan Huisjen wrote:
There are plenty of nutcrackers around, the harder task is getting the inner membrane off. Without doing that, the hazelnuts are bitter.
What? Hazel? I have never heard of that. Almonds get blanched but hazels?
Mary Combs wrote:
Dan Huisjen wrote:The thing that takes all the profit out of hazel nuts is shelling them. If I were to grow them, I'd hope to produce 50-100 pounds of them, shelled. But shelling that many with a hand cracker or small hammer is a non-starter. Anyone know of simple machinery for the task?
There are plenty of nutcrackers around, the harder task is getting the inner membrane off. Without doing that, the hazelnuts are bitter.
http://wickedgoodkitchen.com/how-to-easily-peel-blanch-hazelnuts/
Also, in the UK, hazels are sold green as cobnuts in shops for a short window of time as a higher end product...
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2007/sep/08/features.recipes
www.alwaysgrowingdesign.weebly.com
"It is, of course, one of the miracles of science that the germs that used to be in our food have been replaced by poisons." - Wendell Berry
I live at 8300 feet in the southern Colorado foothills. Many trees (maples, oaks, and most fruit trees) won't grow at this elevation. I would love to have hazelnuts if they would survive but would hate sentence new starts to death if they can't grow here. If anyone has any experience or thoughts on this I would love to hear from you.
www.alwaysgrowingdesign.weebly.com
"It is, of course, one of the miracles of science that the germs that used to be in our food have been replaced by poisons." - Wendell Berry
Laura Sweany wrote:Interesting note: coppicing the bushes (see author Ben Law about this British woodland and forester practice) will greatly increase the life of the plant. Most hazelnuts lose vigor after about 100 years, but stools from coppiced plants have been dated at over 450 years old!
Would pollarding at about hip-height work to rejuvenate the shrubs, or is the suckering key there?
www.alwaysgrowingdesign.weebly.com
"It is, of course, one of the miracles of science that the germs that used to be in our food have been replaced by poisons." - Wendell Berry
Laura Sweany wrote:
Would pollarding at about hip-height work to rejuvenate the shrubs, or is the suckering key there?
I asked Michael about this too, and he says the way commercial growers in Oregon do it, they grow the entire bush on top of a 4-5' trunk (essentially pollarding it at that level), so they can run sprayers and harvesters underneath the branches. He suggests you could simply cage around the main trunk, and let rabbits have the suckers - then harvest the branches when they are the girth you desire, and let them grow out again. Growers will do this when they find blight on a branch or two in an otherwise healthy tree. Their trees are at least 100 years old in some cases, and still producing vigorously.
I understand Dave Jacke is working on a book about woodland management - coppicing and pollarding are large topics he will be covering thoroughly. I can hardly wait!
You guys haven't done this much, have ya? I suggest you study this tiny ad:
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https://permies.com/wiki/238453/Freaky-Cheap-Heat-hour-movie
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