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Transforming 20 Acres of Timber Lot Into a Hedged Homestead

 
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Hello all! I recently purchased 20 acres of land in NE Washington with the plan to develop it over the next 5+ years and at some point after that retire to move there. The location is zone 6a(maybe 20 miles south of the 6a/5b zone), gets around 20" of rain per year and 35" of snow, and is at 1900' elevation. It is very very flat, maybe 5-10' of elevation change sloping from the NE down to the SW. The parcel is north/south oriented, about 600' east to west and about 1400' north to south. The property was being managed for timber production, with almost all the trees being fir and some spruce, in various stages of growth. There are some older seed trees that I hope to use for building and a lot of younger trees that have been thinned/released here and there to promote growth. From my walk through it's in need of that again as new seeds have created some thick growth in spots. One of my biggest issues is my current location, I live about 1300 miles from this property. So my hope is to take 2 trips a year, drive up in the spring around last frost time and in the autumn before the snow starts flying, and perform what maintenance that I can with the goal of establishing a variety of other trees.

Phase 1: Hedging
As the title suggests, one of my first goals is to plant a living hedge around a reasonable amount of the land. Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera) would be the primary tree, planted from seed, in a single row 9" on center. As the whips grow from seed, in the autumn I would bend them over and weave each plant between as many others as it can reach. Then the next plant is woven above the previous, alternating the weave to lock them into place. The next year of growth from lateral buds would also be woven in during autumn, and each year the woven fence gets taller. This is based on a method reported in "Hedges, Windbreaks, Shelters, and Living Fences" by E.P.Powell, written in 1900. I believe that's where the phrase "hog tight, horse high, and bull strong" might have come from but I'm not sure.

Within 3-5 years the goal would be a hedge tall enough to prevent the numerous deer and elk in the area from hopping over to eat everything else planted inside. I would install a gate at either end of the hedge, something wide enough to allow a well drilling truck through, and I would need to lash junk poles to the gate to keep deer from hopping over at this point as well. Osage Orange is hardy to zone 4 and does fine in poor soil, which I expect this is if it was being farmed for timber. A forester will be doing a timber survey so I will find out how the soil is doing, and I could amend the soil as I go if it's really lacking certain nutrients. I also hope to mulch as much as possible around the hedge planting to keep grasses from invading and hindering the seeds. I was thinking of renting a chipper and tossing all the thinned trees which are mostly little things in there, and laying that out where possible. Due to the size of the project it might also require delivering some mulch.

After a year or two of establishing, I would look at companion planting along the hedge to help it out, either perennial nitrogen fixing plants and/or nutrient accumulators that I could chop and drop in the fall. Or perhaps just mulching to prevent any competition as the trees grow would be best? Once the hedge is tall enough to keep out wildlife, I would install the gates and plant fruit and nut trees inside to get them started a bit prior to retiring. I'm torn between broadcast sowing white clover and other ground covers to improve the soil throughout the site, as it may also attract deer as a feeding site- is that a valid concern? There is over 500 acres of timber land just across the private road so an endless supply of feeders would help themselves unless I have it all hedged/fenced off. But putting additional shrubs and ground covers along the tree hedge would be in the plan, once the new plants aren't competing so much with the hedge trees for water and nutrients.

Phase 1.5: Coppice Wood
I'm looking at black locust, red maple, hybrid poplar, hazel, and perhaps chestnut and beech as coppice options as they are all reported to grow and coppice well. I plan to build a rocket mass heater and fuel it from the property, from coppiced wood and hedge pruning. I could also have different patches of coppice based on the use: if I find I'm using far less wood for heating then some coppice patches could go on a longer rotation to provide other materials. Outside of leaving the largest existing fir trees for building (looking at a wofati/Oehler style), I would expect to thin out plenty of room for new trees to grow. Of course those new shoots are going to be vulnerable to foraging deer and as I'm looking to plant hundreds of each tree I'm not sure that there's a cost effective way to protect them all. So right now I'm thinking "spray and pray", and plant as many seeds as I have space and time, and hope that enough survive the first year to be a usable crop in 5-7 years. Then i would repeat the process each year, replanting from seed in all the spots that were eaten the year before. If I get lucky and a majority of trees are able to make it then there might be some older trees that can be kept as standards and eventually turned into new building materials as they thicken up. I could plant every 5-10 feet at first, say 2-3 seeds per spot, in the spring and thin to the best sprout in the fall or following spring. I would try to come up with a layout that places the locust in a grid of sorts that allows the other species to be nearby and hopefully benefit from the nitrogen fixing. But with different growth rates and needing to have a rotation that allows new shoots to get sun without competition from adjoining growth, I'm not sure how reasonable that would be. I consider coppice wood a lesser priority of "1.5" because the county has a program where residents can get up to 4 cords of firewood for $20, which will more than cover my needs as a backup plan. I would not be surprised if deer ate every new tree they find not named douglas fir, although I'm hoping the thorns on the osage orange give them a fighting chance.

Phase 2: Food Bearing Plants
After the hedge has had time to grow large enough to limit deer pressure, I would look to plant some fruit trees and shrubs and additional nut trees inside the hedge for food production. As I doubt it would be reasonable for the hedge to surround all 20 acres, additional trees and shrubs for animal forage would be planted outside the hedge, and protected with fencing to let them get established. I would also focus on fruiting shrubs on the outside of the hedge, so animals will have plenty of options on their side of the hedge. I'll be looking at options that either store well via canning, root cellar, or drying with a solar dehydrator. I won't be expecting to live solely off food from the property any time soon, but as things develop I'll dip my feet into food preservation and might one day add chickens into the system. So starting off I would look at planting a variety of fruit trees that have varied harvest times, and build plant guilds around them. I will have a house plan designed by then too, so as fruit trees go in I will know where to keep clear.

Phase 3: Housing
Right now the plan is to get an owner-built exemption from the county and hopefully use the trees already on the property for material, cutting the logs the fall before, and letting them dry out before use as I build the next spring. I would be guessing the douglas fir are around 40 feet tall, maybe a little more, and were at 12-14" DBH. Based on Mike Oehler's info that peeled log being 12" for beams and 10" for posts would work. Due to the nearly flat land, if I were to go with an Oehler/wofati/PAHS design and didn't want to have 200 yards of soil delivered for berming, it would require I excavate say 4 feet down, and use that excavated soil for the remaining wall height and green roof. A simple shed roof facing south would result in the berm being 3' above grade on the north side and the south side would be 7-8' above grade depending on width and slope of the roof. Of course providing for drainage and keeping the posts protected from moisture and soil life will be key. I could see building a walipini that's attached to the house or nearby, with a compost pile beyond that, and at the end where the slope drops a few feet perhaps mulch basins could be placed around a little grove of willow if gray water processing could be handled year round. The frost line is 30", but the hope would be that the gray water line would be out of any frozen soil if it traveled through the walpini and under the compost piles. I have no idea if that would work, especially if there was a very cold, cloudy week which prevented any solar gain in the greenhouse. Perhaps the first test RMH could stay in the greenhouse as insurance, and the second build would be inside? Then I could fire up the greenhouse model on the coldest days if freezing was a concern.

Any thoughts or concerns with the ideas above? The structural integrity of any housing is a given, and I will be looking at that for several years as I go out to the site to tend to trees. I'm sure my thoughts will evolve as I get a better understanding of what I have. Thanks in advance for any feedback!
 
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hau Mark, congratulations on your land purchase.

Instead of planting a single row of Osage Orange, I would recommend a double row, that will give you depth as you weave the whips and branches together for the hedge row.
Depth will make it far harder for animals to sneak or break through while the trees are growing up. It usually takes about 4 years for Osage Orange to become sturdy enough to hold back animals if planted in a single row, plus with the double row you can weave both rows into each other for even more gnarly growth (this will hold back even wild boar).

I would also recommend you think about any earth works for water control, soaking into the soil will be a prime need with only 20" of rain fall per year. It is always best to get any earthworks done before you get into plant placements, that way you don't have to move something once you get it into the ground.
Doing the earth works also will function to remove any trees that might be in the path of your earth works, so that will function as a thinning of the current trees at the same time.

Redhawk
 
Mark Brunnr
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Thanks for the feedback Redhawk, I've bought enough extra seed that I can do a staggered double row for sure, although some of the land has thicker canopy so I'll have to decide what I can surround properly without cutting timber that I want to keep growing.

I received my timber management report (required to keep the low tax rate) and the soil is 84% sand, 11% silt, and 5% clay, so water retention is going to be a serious problem combined with the low rainfall. I'm considering having tons of wood chips delivered and dumped so I can mulch along the hedge. Getting enough to make a dent will be pricey for sure, something like 40 cubic yards as a minimum. I was thinking I could try to turn my thinning slash into charcoal and mix that into the hedge trench, and/or have manure brought in as well. But without a water supply on the site I can't safely burn anything.

So the other options are to rent a chipper and use those wood chips as mulch, or bury the logs in the trench along with some manure, cover that with a few inches of soil, and plant seeds into the soil. But I doubt the wood will break down fast enough to not be competition for the seeds for nitrogen, maybe that can be done a year in advance so it can break down some. This is very new to me. So if I can get a company to deliver chips to the location (no address assigned to it yet) I'll probably stick to mulching the hedge and see how that goes for year 1.

Once I get on site in about 2 months I can do some soil shake tests to confirm in a basic way, as the soil profile might just be from the generalized USGS values for the area. But since this site was just for timber production I expect the soil quality will be poor and need amending. I'm hoping I can establish this hedge and get it growing for a few years so it can deter deer, but there's no urgent time frame for it beyond my retirement in say 5-6 years.

I was thinking I could also bring some seed for various ground covers that might help improve the amount of organic matter in the soil, chop and drop perennial plants in the fall before the snow starts. But same as the hedge, at best I can sow seeds and rake them into the soil, maybe put a little mulch on if I have some to spare, and hope it rains enough for the seeds to sprout. Transplanting seedlings would need water as well when I put them in so unless I get lucky and there is some rain I think straight from seed would be more cost effective.
 
Mark Brunnr
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There is also 2 existing slash piles that were burned at least a year prior that still have some decent sized logs. I  was thinking I could move those around a little and place them next to the planted seeds with a little soil bermed up on it to aid in any decay, but perhaps I could just scrape off the charcoal and mix that into the trench too. If I rent a tiller to break up the soil and remove any competing roots then mixing in the charcoal shouldn't be too bad. Using the remaining wood to help level any spots to minimize water runoff (most of the site is 0-2% slope already).
 
Bryant RedHawk
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With your new information I can make some slightly better suggestions;

If you were to take some surveyor's tape and walk through the timber, you could mark the trees you want to take down, the tape will give you a visual way to space those to remain for optimal growth.
If you approach this as a way to make alleys then you would be able to set up swales and berms so that when you do get rain it can soak in instead of run off and cause erosion of the soil that is there.

Your soil needs more clay, preferably around 11% clay, that will allow the sand to bind to the clay particles which will help greatly with water retention so it sticks around instead of heading down to the water table quickly.
Once the extra clay is spread out you can then get maximum benefit from the wood chips.

To make biochar in your area a retort (double walled cooker) would be the safest method. The inner chamber is where the wood goes and the outer chamber is for the heat. It would prevent sparks from getting released into the air and possibly causing a fire.

Making the cut trees into chips would be more productive in your area than burying logs and hoping they would begin to decay, that might take some years to occur.
I always prefer to use on site wood to make into chips rather than having them brought in, for one thing the wood is already there and acclimated to the site, for another you are then able to make best use of what you are removing anyway.

Once you are on site perhaps you could get some pictures and find out the actual slopes and their direction(s) that are present, that will be what dictates the best approach so you can optimize your efforts.

I'm happy to offer suggestions (like the above ones), the more information you can share, the better advice I can offer up.  

Redhawk
 
Mark Brunnr
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After visiting and getting my hands dirty, I would say the soil survey was definitely based on the general area, not my specific 20 acres. I didn't do a soil comp test, putting samples in a jar with water/shake/settle/mark method but will plan for that going forward.

Overall the slope was very flat in most areas, like 0-2% slope, with some specific spots where there was (relatively) significant slope change. So say 1-2' drop over 300', then a 5' drop over 50', and then another 1-2' change over another 200'.

I pruned out some smaller trees where they were bunched up, lots of spots where a 6" DBH tree had 1-3 more trees within a foot or two that were 1-2" DBH. So I cut out the small ones that were too close, and left the cut trees in more open spots. Couldn't get a tree trimmer out in a timely manner to chip them, but I doubt I would have had enough material to make it worth it. I spent a full day removing ladder fuel and tossing the pieces away from any trees in case there's a ground fire.

Like any parcel in the wild, the soil was a mix of conditions. There's been plenty of trees that had been left on the ground and broken down over the years, with great soil underneath including happy worms and bugs. Other spots were more exposed with what seemed heavy clay soil and rocks. So I can see once I'm there full time and have a 4x4 with hitch that can bring in a chipper or pick up material from nearby sites, I can really add organic matter to spots where I want to grow more.

I did get a lot of seeds planted, black locust and osage orange only after talking to the forester about conditions. The red maple he felt would need more water than the site normally gets to establish properly. I soaked the seeds the night before to help get them started. I planted 2-3 osage orange seeds at 9" intervals around 350' along the south of the property where the road easement runs, and near the east edge of the property was a flat, open area where I planted black locust seeds every 3 big steps/10' in a grid- I planted a row then shifted over about 10' and came back for the next row. I might have filled in an acre or so that way, putting 2-3 seeds in each spot to hope that at least 1 seed would grow. I then realized how long this was taking as I planted in a light cold drizzle, and decided to "broadcast seed" the remainder of both in other open spaces, hoping some will take hold.

My will to plant all the seeds directly as planned was dampened a bit by the sheer number of deer in the area- at one point I looked up and counted 11 deer running by the south perimeter, and multiple times saw 5-6 deer hanging out at the north end of the property as well. Several little game trails between my trees where they regularly run since the neighbor to my west is active and has a fenced area for horses. Lots of deer droppings too where they stop to munch on stuff. So my concern is that the fresh new shoots become the latest in-season fare at the open-air bistro these deer frequent. So I put in about 3 days of planting, and will see how much survives when I go back in the fall. If the osage orange does well, I'll weave the shoots together to create the hedge base, and keep doing that each year and plant more seeds to extend the hedge.
IMG_0355.JPG
Osage Orange hedge from seeds
Osage Orange hedge from seeds
 
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This is so incredible! I have 10 acres in kootenai county, Idaho, very close to you but we just bought it two months ago and our first priority is to fence it.  I am very concerned with large predators (bears and cougars) as I know they are there...google Athol, ID to see the grizzly and cougar issue this summer. I struggled with how to put in a fence to keep deer out and sheep/goats in as week.  Nothing I could think of, that I thought was feasible, exsisted until I saw this post! I do plan on planting to provide for the wild life as well since I am taking some of their habitat, which you are doing too.

Like you, I have a few more years before we totally relocate. Our move is not so time based but event driven....but those triggers should be met in about 2-4 years...I prefer the later time estimate but my wife wants to go now, lol.

I am so grateful to you all for sharing your wisdom! I can't explain to you the excitement I experienced when reading the posts, crazy, huh?  To think 10 years ago I would have never looked at this, how things change!
 
Mark Brunnr
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Yeah I'm glad I discovered and acknowledged that my goals are getting more aligned with what I enjoy, and I believe that we all need to focus on goals that make us happy as soon as we can in life, instead of waiting until "one of these days", which might never come.

Sadly all the seeds I planted either didn't sprout, didn't make it past germination, or were eaten by deer, as I couldn't find any evidence of them when I visited this fall. I plan to try again this next spring, planting from seed but perhaps also sprouting a flat of black locust and osage orange as well to see if they survive or are eaten by deer. So some will be protected by simple wire fence and others will not.

Then when I come back next fall, I hope to return with yet more seed to sow so that the seeds can have all winter in the ground as well in case they need that to improve germination. Going to try a variety of methods and hopefully get some growing while I have a couple years to get things established.

I'd like to do the same with fruit and nuts trees, but not having much water most of the year and almost none in the summer requires I have some infrastructure in place. Getting a well installed and solar panels to power a pump to fill a cistern and then a timer to irrigate can be done, but if I'm so far away my main concern is someone coming along and taking it.

Some simple fencing of a limited area to start a few trees could be done cheaply enough to prevent deer from jumping in but the well and the rest are the gotcha. I will probably spend more time working out the layout for the house and garden spaces as best I can to try to plan the well location and water storage, but it's tough to observe when you aren't there most of the year. I might try to increase my visits to get a better handle of it all, but making extra 2600 mile round trips is rough too!
 
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Mark,

Sounds like a great start.  I agree with Redhawk that you plant a double row of Osage orange.  In fact, were it me, I would include some Osage orange for copicing.  I grew up with an Osage orange “tree” that got cut down several times. We always burned the wood and it was magnificent firewood.  The tree kept growing back year after year.

Later, instead of cutting the whole tree we only cut a couple of branches per season.  A trimmed branch would grow back at the rate of three feet per year.

Anyhow, best of luck and please keep the thread updated with your progress.

Eric
 
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This year I tried out a cheap-ish fencing option and it's worked to keep the deer out of my food forest.  I'm not sure if it would work for elk.  Here's a link to my remesh fence without posts.  They say deer won't jump two 4' fences that are 4' apart.  Maybe elk won't jump two 5' fences that are 5' apart?  With this design, the two "fences" can be as far apart as you want.  The fence can weave around trees (and even be attached to them if you want).  If the perimeter doesn't have corners I don't think it needs any posts.

Just a thought.  Maybe it would last long enough to get your living fence plants established...
 
Stephan Quintavalli
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Mike Jay wrote:This year I tried out a cheap-ish fencing option and it's worked to keep the deer out of my food forest.  I'm not sure if it would work for elk.  Here's a link to my remesh fence without posts.  They say deer won't jump two 4' fences that are 4' apart.  Maybe elk won't jump two 5' fences that are 5' apart?  With this design, the two "fences" can be as far apart as you want.  The fence can weave around trees (and even be attached to them if you want).  If the perimeter doesn't have corners I don't think it needs any posts.

Just a thought.  Maybe it would last long enough to get your living fence plants established...




Thanks for the update....theft is a big concern for me as well as we experience all to often here in Miami....

I thought of using a lower cattle panel type fence for the outside fence and putting about a 3 gap before installing the second fence that would be even higher.  I figured I would grow willows, osage orange and a variety of thorny berry bushes to fill it out.  This would make a great barrier for predators and provide forage for the deer on the outside and goats on the inside.....but it looks like i need to space it further out to 4'.  I hope the root system of all those plants would make it more challenging to coyotes as well...plus the dogs should be alerted to their digging.  I am so greatful for everyone sharing their ideas and experience, this is what the interwebz is for!
 
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I use slash to make a brush pile "fence" (about 4' wide, 4' high) along 400 feet of property boundary for animal habitat, combined with four foot mesh wire fence and some shrubbery.  Then I will also have an instant trellis for berries.  If deer make it over that, I will just put up a 6-7' high wire between trees.

I'm hoping that strong fishing line strung at 2' and 6' heights between trees and T-bar posts will deter deer along other more open borders.  So far I've done well nailing large staples into (deciduous) trees.

In my climate, most deciduous trees (like hawthorne, mulberry, hazel, hazelnut, or apple) can be coppiced and used for traditional English-style hedge-laying.  That is my future project.
 
Stephan Quintavalli
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Josh Garbo wrote:I use slash to make a brush pile "fence" (about 4' wide, 4' high) along 400 feet of property boundary for animal habitat, combined with four foot mesh wire fence and some shrubbery.  Then I will also have an instant trellis for berries.  If deer make it over that, I will just put up a 6-7' high wire between trees.

I'm hoping that strong fishing line strung at 2' and 6' heights between trees and T-bar posts will deter deer along other more open borders.  So far I've done well nailing large staples into (deciduous) trees.

In my climate, most deciduous trees (like hawthorne, mulberry, hazel, hazelnut, or apple) can be coppiced and used for traditional English-style hedge-laying.  That is my future project.



Hmm, interesting.  I could put up an initial exterior fence and then push the slash up on it and box it in with a second, interior fence.  But I am assuming it needs to be 4' wide to keep deer from jumping across.  
 
Josh Garbo
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In my situation, the deer can't really get a running start, so I'm not worried about them clearing the slash.  In your case, maybe the slash would stop the deer from seeing into the property?
 
Stephan Quintavalli
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Josh Garbo wrote:In my situation, the deer can't really get a running start, so I'm not worried about them clearing the slash.  In your case, maybe the slash would stop the deer from seeing into the property?



I'm hoping it would block line of sight and possible provide enough browse on the outside to keep them satisfied as well.
 
Eric Hanson
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Mark,

I mentioned this before but as I look back on the post, I was a bit unclear.  If you were to plant a third row of Osage, you would have a mighty barrier in place.  Once established, you could coppice an occasional bush/tree for firewood here and there and still have an excellent living fence.  Alternatively, you could trim back some of the inside branches each year or pollard them and they would grow back very quickly.  The one Osage tree of my childhood would regrow a trimmed branch at the rate of 3 feet per year.

I make the suggestion of Osage orange for several reasons.  

First, you are already there planting it so you would not need another plantation for firewood.

Secondly,  you would be making your living fence extra strong.

Thirdly, in my opinion, Osage is the finest fuel wood available.  It burns very hot, slow and long (actually it smolders more than burns, but this is fine with me) and leaves little ash.

Fourth, it grows quickly and coppices well.

Finally, although it burns superbly, it won’t catch fire easily.  You have indicated that you live in an area with a wildfire risk and although Osage will of course burn in a forest fire, it does take a fair amount of heat & fire to catch fire, thus minimizing the likelihood of an accidental fire.

In case you can’t tell, I am a big fan of Osage orange and I applaud your decision to include it in your landscape.  I would think that by planting just a bit more, you could also have an excellent fence and an outstanding supply of firewood.

Best of luck and please keep us updated,

Eric
 
Mark Brunnr
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Thanks for the suggestions, the wavy 5 foot tall fence held up with wire sounds like a good option for testing next spring/fall, to give an area that should hopefully be deer free.

I agree that plenty of osage orange in the hedge would be very handy as another fuel wood option. I was thinking the same thing with hazel, try to coppice some to see how they work as well once I can protect them and the nuts.
 
Mark Brunnr
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Testing black locust seeds out a few weeks before I head up to try planting some more, starting with scarification. On my first trip I soaked the seeds in warm tap water for a little less than a day. I've heard that they do best when simulating a fire, and space is cleared for the new shoots to take a hold and grow. So the first picture shows the effect of tap water, nearly boiling water, and fully boiling water poured into ceramic cups, and 10 seeds added to each:


60% germination/swelling from tap water, compared to 80-90% for very hot to boiling water. I took all the seeds which didn't swell and the control seeds and put them back in just-boiling water and they all swelled the second time around. I left them in the water for an extra 2 days by mistake, and each one was also sprouting when I took them out.

I then put all the seeds in little pots in a sunny spot, and watered twice a day... most days... but at least once a day, and we've had consistent rain as well. many seeds started sprouting, but I've noticed that they lose their first pair of leaves fairly often:



I put about 6 seeds in each pot, and probably had 5 sprouts in each initially, but now I have maybe 10 total between 5 pots. So 35 seeds that were relatively babied is down to 35% success and they are all at 1 inch tall. Boiling water seems like the best bet to get them started, and I'll try the little peat pots next that you can place right in the soil, and I'll bring some pieces of fencing to put around as many as I can. Will also get a couple bags of mulch and will see this fall if it was any help. If not, I won't bother repeating the process until I'm up there every day to baby the plants along their first year or two.
 
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Any new updates Mark?  I'm working on a living hedge myself, so this topic is very interesting to me.
 
Mark Brunnr
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There's just 1 seed with leaves remaining from the initial batch, I believe the leaves were being eaten by snails as I found one or two in the morning once. I started a new batch of black locust seeds in a starter tray after soaking again in near-boiling water for 24 hours. After a couple days I now have around 50 plants each with a starting pair of leaves. I put the tray out during the day so they get full sunlight for a couple hours. Keeping the tray cover on but slightly open to maintain moisture content and bring the tray in at night to keep the snails at bay.

Once these get a second pair of leaves or get too tall for the tray, I'll plant the moss starters into 1 gallon pots with good soil so they keep growing. I'm tempted to try cloth pouches that are about 1 gallon in size instead, so if the roots are vigorous and reach the edges they will air prune which tends to promote root growth, versus longer roots wrapping around a plastic pot.

In October (assuming I have at least a dozen healthy trees) I'll go back and plant these and mulch them and stake down a 6' diameter, 4' tall fence around each to keep the deer off of them. Fingers crossed they will take between fall/winter/spring and be hardy enough to handle the 3 dry summer months. I'll repeat the process next year, starting a new batch to plant next October, and each year after that assuming the first ones are surviving. The first batch will be in year 4 when I move up there, so hopefully just a couple years after that I can start to coppice each batch for firewood, and then get on to a cycle of 5-ish years for each harvest.

I'll bring the Osage Orange seeds I have in October and plant those directly on site after the hot water treatment as well, as previously I planted seed in the spring and I doubt they had a chance to establish. They still might not survive the summer or the deer, I'll mulch them and will test by fencing a section off to compare. If the fenced area is the only spot with trees left, then I'll do my best to get something simple put up to limit deer access without breaking the bank.

I might have to wait until I'm on site permanently before I can get things to take off. I want to check with the building department as I'm hoping to get a shop/garage built to protect the well which would go in first prior to my move. Then get water storage inside to capture rain off the roof, and I could install solar I'm buying this year to pump water from the well with a float switch during the summer, and use drip irrigation off that on a timer to keep things properly watered. The timing of all that will be tough since I'm 1300 miles away...
 
Trace Oswald
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I started honey locust and black locust in 1 gal root pouches this year.  They aren't big enough yet that I can tell how well the air pruning really works.
 
Mark Brunnr
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Progress pics for the 24 black locust in the back yard, they have been growing well in the larger pots, although I'm thinking these pots are too small-a lesson learned for the next batch. I'm going to try this deer fence around the trees, and if it works I'll expand it each year:


Hopefully this batch will take root when planted in early October, and by spring will get established in time for the normally dry summer months. They are around 18" tall now, probably would be larger and certainly better rooting if in the ground directly... I'll be bringing some seeds too and will plant them directly to see if winter scarification works well, couldn't hurt to get extra trees started and would be interesting to see if they catch up to the transplants. It'll all depend on the deer leaving them be, although they are covered in thorns on the new shoots.
file-1.jpeg
Seedlings transplanted after a couple weeks, most around 4-6
Seedlings transplanted after a couple weeks, most around 4-6
file1.jpeg
Seedlings after 5 weeks in larger pots, about 18
Seedlings after 5 weeks in larger pots, about 18
 
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Mark, really enjoying your adventure!

I started a bunch (like 200) of thornless honeylocust this spring, and had massive slug and bird issues with the seedlings. I had about 70% mortality. A couple things helped, first, the ones that did well had mulch in the form of wood chips, for long enough to degrade them. Here it is a couple years. There maybe three. This gave the slugs time to proliferate, and also got some moisture retained and I got toads. They really help with the slugs. I also had a major benefit from the tree tubes. I used 5' tubes (which may not help with elk as wel as deer, but still should help). This was a major up-front expense, but I use the same tubes as I grow my systems out. The trees grow about 2x the rate in the tubes, more if you count the ones that are not killed by deer. The hedgerow, I used a bunch of deadfall loosely placed, deer don't seem to like to go in there, but if you have rabbits, they will eat the seedlings. Ask me how I know. Fortunately the foxes have helped but it took them a year to find the bunnies.

I realize you are at a deficit in terms of easy biomass in that climate, but when I lived out west, we used rocks for mulch as well. Then you get ground squirrels and rattlers but maybe it would work. A landscape rake may bring the stones to the surface if you can get one in there.

I definitely think growing from seed is a good plan. I would also have a nursery area with lots of replacements for areas that are cleaned out. I plant at least double and move stuff all the time. It will be more of a challenge in your climate I am afraid. Per dollar I would say the tree tubes are a really nice addition if you are paying for mulch or have trouble getting some biomass for seedlings. I am a fan of developing the tree layer, which will keep the wind off the ground level, collect snow, and drop more biomass than ground-level stuff with alot of deer pressure.
 
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Following ... picking up 40 acres of cleared stumpy land we want to convert to a future homestead as well and was thinking of cover crops since the cutting was done in September and how I would broadcast them in mud season along with future pollarding trees etc. :D
 
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i have begun to experimetn with utilizing debris fencing to protect my planting area from wind, sun and browse, as in a great many perennial endeavors i wont knwo results for some time, but I am hopeful that this can be a good strategy as well and perhaps cheaper than tree tubes, though likely a little less effective.
 
Mark Brunnr
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I forgot to update this thread - unfortunately the site was too dry in summer for the seedlings/seeds to survive. I installed a fence around 1/4 acre and planted the seedlings as well as a bunch of black locust seeds at 10' spacings in a staggered grid in the fall and the next fall when I returned everything was dead. Only one dead seedling was visible, the rest were totally gone. Perhaps deer ate them, as a neighbor mentioned that the spring was wet but then there was no rain at all in June/July/August and all the weeds that sprung up from the wet spring died out and were then a tinder box waiting for wildfire.

So since I felt there was little to no chance of anything growing I didn't try anything the following year. I also had a much better understanding of how things could shake out if I were to build what I wanted on bare timber land and a neighbor took exception. Essentially I would have a load of trouble, unless I started by building something I didn't want that met code, then built accessory buildings for what I wanted.

The cost of doing all that seemed excessive, so instead I talked to Paul and have purchased Deep Roots at Wheaton Labs, currently with info here: https://permies.com/t/168047/permaculture-projects/Deep-roots-wheaton-labs-rent where I plan to move next spring when I retire early. I was able to put the Washington property up for sale and sold it a couple weeks ago, so it was a win-win in that I was able to try some things out and made a little on the sale due to the crazy pricing happening these days.

I still have a pound or two of seeds and once I get a junk pole fence built next spring I will try once again to grow a living fence of osage orange, and get various fruit and nut trees started as the front yard to my wofati. Since there will be nearly 1000 feet of that living fence, just trimming it each year once established might be enough wood for a RMH, but those shoots might be less than straight. Perhaps I can grow a few black locust as well inside the fence, and hopefully I can start some in Allerton Abbey's fenced area too.

I'll probably start a new thread once my days on the lab begin and I start documenting that new adventure!
 
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