"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
The ultimate goal of farming is not the growing of crops, but the cultivation and perfection of human beings. - Masanobu Fukuoka
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
Brandon Karhu wrote:The cool thing is I'm 20 years old, so i have a while to mess around with stuff like this.
Soaking up information.
Jordan Lowery wrote:
Really I find a lot of the talk is regurgitation of what other people say. It's like sepp holzer says you never know until you try it.
Brandon Karhu wrote:I am very eager although not impatient, and as for land use. I have access to acres. I will try to start getting seeds from tree's grown locally, and germinating them. Does anyone have links to resources on how to do this correctly?
Jason Pitzer wrote:Judith Browning if you are on here still do you know where I can get some of the Blood Peach seeds or would you have any to share?
"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
John Duda wrote:Dave you got one out of three apple trees to fruit in 6 years. That's considerably better than the war stories about growing from seed proclaim. That's what I'm interested in. Are the results of your efforts better than what the common knowledge tells us? Do your fruits taste better than you expected? Do you get quicker results, smaller trees than the giants they tell us results? Have you grafted to any of your seed grown trees
Cultivate abundance for people, plants and wildlife - Growing with Nature
Farmer Dan
Living in Anjou , France,
For the many not for the few
http://www.permies.com/t/80/31583/projects/Permie-Pennies-France#330873
Works at a residential alternative high school in the Himalayas SECMOL.org . "Back home" is Cape Cod, E Coast USA.
Jordan Johnston wrote: currently i am growing seabuckthorn
seabuckthorn seed that i have purchased does not say if it comes from a certain cultivar i purchased the seed from incredible seed company...im sure if asked they would gladly awnser.Tatyana Piven wrote:
Jordan Johnston wrote: currently i am growing seabuckthorn
Are you growing the wild variety or a cultivar? I can’t find seeds from cultivars (I do have a wild seed). Dug through the whole internet it seems, all in vain...
A Crossman wrote:I have grown a mulberry from seed successfully bit then moved from Ontario to Saskatchewan so was not able to move with it. I have 6 Hardy Chinese peach trees that I successfully grew from seed. The key to peaches is to crack the pit a little. I stratified them in the fridge for a while and then they sprouted. Out of 7, they all sprouted, one had some mold on it and didn't survive. I have grown a lot of other trees from seed as well. Don't let them dry out.
John Duda wrote:I know, I know this is an old thread, but it was promoted and I read the whole thing and then realized there's nothing recent! So I left the thread and thought awhile. After all this time what results were gleaned from those of you who grew fruit from seeds.
Judith Browning
Jordan Lowery
S. Bengi
Leila Hamaya
Dave Miller
Dave you got one out of three apple trees to fruit in 6 years. That's considerably better than the war stories about growing from seed proclaim. That's what I'm interested in. Are the results of your efforts better than what the common knowledge tells us? Do your fruits taste better than you expected? Do you get quicker results, smaller trees than the giants they tell us results? Have you grafted to any of your seed grown trees?
Again I apologize for restarting an old thread, but I think it's a great chance for us to learn from those who've done it.
stephen lowe wrote:Sepp talks about just spreading the mash from pressing fruit for cider/juice/schnapps on fresh terraces or anywhere you want to establish fruit trees. He is very much into the notion that the tree that sprouts on your land and survives browsing will have the best root system and will, at the very least, be near ideal as rootstock for grafting. I dream of employing this technique if I ever have land. For now I am planning to plant seabuckthorn that is currently stratifying as well as local elderberry and currant seed this summer. SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS!
The wishbone never could replace the backbone.
Sonja Draven wrote:
stephen lowe wrote:Sepp talks about just spreading the mash from pressing fruit for cider/juice/schnapps on fresh terraces or anywhere you want to establish fruit trees. He is very much into the notion that the tree that sprouts on your land and survives browsing will have the best root system and will, at the very least, be near ideal as rootstock for grafting. I dream of employing this technique if I ever have land. For now I am planning to plant seabuckthorn that is currently stratifying as well as local elderberry and currant seed this summer. SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS!
Okay, I'm totally going to try this after I make applesauce this year. I have two wonderful apple trees on the property that have been producing well for 30+ years and I know they won't last forever. Starting them over again with their seeds would be so great. I was going to try it when I was a kid because I loved the applesauce from one of them so much. But my dad said it couldn't be done. This thread gives me hope.
I'm going to try it with nectarine and peach pits too. I will look for more detailed information on that since the question about exactly how to do it wasn't answered yet.
The wishbone never could replace the backbone.
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