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Old 19-09-2007, 11:57 PM posted to rec.gardens
FragileWarrior FragileWarrior is offline
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Default Black Walnut Seeds

Eggs Zachtly wrote in news:6b0zkgmhwtu0
:

dicko said:

On 18 Sep 2007 11:17:51 -0400, Jim Kingdon wrote:

While scarifying is an alternative, it is not necessary, any more

than
stratification. It may influence germination, but in nature, it
doesn't happen that much, scarification that is. Nursery's stratify
black walnut, but seldom scarify, just as they stratify other seed.

In nature, scarification happens by a seed coat being gradually worn
away or a seed coat being cracked by freezing. Scarification is a way
to speed this up (with cutting a notch and hot water seeming to be the
preferred techniques). At least, that's what my book on propagating
woody plants says.

But each plant is different. And I don't know anything about black
walnut in particular.

Getting some instructions from someone who has propagated the
particular plant in question is recommended. Sure in nature, the
plant grows (somehow). But whether this happens quickly, or how many
seeds are needed for one seeding, or whether the seed passes through
the digestive tract of a bird or mammal in nature, or whether you can
keep a seed in the ground for months/years and recognize it as a
non-weed when it does come up, or whatever, make the garden situation
often different.


This link has a pamphlet written in 1910 on how to sprout black
walnuts.
http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/pr_histpubs...lers/sc013.asp


Now, just where do you expect us to get some black walnuts from 1910???


I was just cleaning out the basement for a family of packrats. If you
let me get to the back corner, I bet I can find some.

(The trashman told me that we've been putting out more trash in front of
this house than some *neighborhoods* have.