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#1
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Acorn clean up?
In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this
year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? FACE |
#2
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FACE wrote:
In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? FACE Don't you have any squirrels? -- Travis in Shoreline Washington |
#3
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On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 16:11:57 GMT, Travis
in rec.gardens wrote: FACE wrote: In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? FACE Don't you have any squirrels? I almost mentioned that. ;-) There are plenty of grey squirrels and way more chipmunks than i would prefer but they appear to be ignoring them -- or maybe not but the extent of the inundatrion is such that it sure does appear that way. FACE |
#4
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FACE wrote in message . ..
In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? FACE No easy way. :-( Maybe hire some trustworthy, hard-working, neighborhood high school students that you could pay by the pound? |
#5
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I just wonder why you want to pick up the acorns.What are you going to do
with them? I have 4 oak trees all over 50 yrs of age which shed loads of acorns but within a few weeks they are taken by squirrels, Jays, pigeons, mice etc, and I doubt if I find more than about 20 a year trying to grow. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
#6
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"FACE" wrote in message ... In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? My lawn sweeper does a pretty good job on mountain ash berries. I bet it would do acorns too. Try renting one. http://www2.yardiac.com/long.asp?tgs...item_id=846 1 Bob |
#7
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"David Hill" wrote in message ...
I just wonder why you want to pick up the acorns.What are you going to do with them? I have 4 oak trees all over 50 yrs of age which shed loads of acorns but within a few weeks they are taken by squirrels, Jays, pigeons, mice etc, and I doubt if I find more than about 20 a year trying to grow. Just a guess, but the acorn shells are hard and sharp and don't lend to a "barefoot lawn". (?) That's why I do it. Wish there was some use for them. I checked for recipes, but they seem to be more trouble than they're worth culinarily- is that a word? |
#8
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"Merle O'Broham" wrote in message om... "David Hill" wrote in message ... I just wonder why you want to pick up the acorns.What are you going to do with them? I have 4 oak trees all over 50 yrs of age which shed loads of acorns but within a few weeks they are taken by squirrels, Jays, pigeons, mice etc, and I doubt if I find more than about 20 a year trying to grow. Just a guess, but the acorn shells are hard and sharp and don't lend to a "barefoot lawn". (?) That's why I do it. Wish there was some use for them. I checked for recipes, but they seem to be more trouble than they're worth culinarily- is that a word? It is now, Mr. President. :-) |
#9
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#10
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On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 09:48:24 +0100, "David Hill"
in rec.gardens wrote: I just wonder why you want to pick up the acorns.What are you going to do with them? I have 4 oak trees all over 50 yrs of age which shed loads of acorns but within a few weeks they are taken by squirrels, Jays, pigeons, mice etc, and I doubt if I find more than about 20 a year trying to grow. You wonder why? That is a reasonable question. But let's do a small comparison: Experience shows that i will have several hundred sprouting by spring and these things will have put down a 4" tap root into clay based soil. They are not easy to pull at that point. I do not have much more oaks in number than you. I have 6 but they are amazing producers -- and 70 to 85 feet tall. FACE |
#11
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On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 15:54:25 GMT, "Bob" in
rec.gardens wrote: "FACE" wrote in message .. . In lower zone 7, does anyone else notice an unusually large acorn crop this year? It is literally crunchy in the backyard. Possibly because I have gotten up the early fall Maple and Poplar leaves I notice it. I have picked up over 20 gallons from the ground but that is not even a dent. Anyone know of some really great way to get them up? My lawn sweeper does a pretty good job on mountain ash berries. I bet it would do acorns too. Try renting one. http://www2.yardiac.com/long.asp?tgs...item_id=846 1 Bob Well that (url) certainly looks like a good idea to go over flat areas. I have been raking and then using a kitchen dustpan on the piles in some areas. The backyard is largely landscaped but in the flat areas-- mostly zoysia -- I have been playing "Christina's World" in the late of the day with a five gallon bucket which I can fill in 60 square feet or so. I had considered my yard blower, which has the vacuum attachments, but past experience shows that I can eat up it's plastic fan pretty quick if the wrong thing gets sucked up. (Hickory burrs will do it for one thing). And to another respondee, yes, the barefoot lawn plays into it all, if you've ever dropped to your knees in what should be soft lawn and had one knee go onto an acorn -- well you know why I want them out of there. Actually the hard caps are not as painful as a fat hard acorn. FACE |
#12
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"FACE" wrote in message
... I had considered my yard blower, which has the vacuum attachments, but past experience shows that I can eat up it's plastic fan pretty quick if the wrong thing gets sucked up. (Hickory burrs will do it for one thing). I don't know how long an extension cord you'd need (and long ones made for outdoor use are expensive), but a shop vac would make short work of your acorn situation, and a tool like that should be in every homeowner's arsenal anyway. One wet basement episode is enough to make you love these machines, if you get a wet/dry type. One precaution: Sharp things will sometimes make little holes in the bag you use to line the vacuum canister. If you vacuum dust afterward, the dust will blow out the seams where the canister closes. So, if you vacuum acorns, be sure to replace the bag with a fresh one. I once used a shop vac to suck up an 8x8 area with Lego bricks 4 inches deep, so I know they'll handle acorns. You don't want to hear the rest of THAT story. :-) |
#13
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No easy way. :-( Maybe hire some trustworthy, hard-working,
neighborhood high school students that you could pay by the pound? You've a great idea there -- by the pound! :-) FACE Wouldn't want to pay them to pick up the acorns from the Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) in California. Acorns can be a little over 2 inches long and in a good year (every third year or so) they can produce about 900-1000 lbs of acorns! Emilie NorCal |
#14
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Wish there was some use
for them. I checked for recipes, but they seem to be more trouble than they're worth culinarily- is that a word? Yes, they must be leached to remove the tannic acid to be edible, but they are very nutritious. Calif Valley Oaks can have 6% Protein, 18% fat, and 68% carbohydrates. Also contain magnesium, calcium, phosphorus, potassium and sulfur. They are an acquired taste-they were pretty good in the cookies I tasted. Acorns were the main staple in the diet of the Calif Indian tribes, making up about 45 % of the diet. Usually ground into flour and made into a mush or soup. Emilie NorCal |
#15
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