Thank you for not planting too close to the power line😅 I trim trees for the power company and its super annoying when tree farms plant within or bordering the right of way❤
That was way bigger than I was expecting. We have a pine tree on my parents property about 40 miles south of the grand canyon that has grown about a foot and a half in about 20 years.
Beautiful, fast growing trees. I have two planted on my urban 1/2 acre, and I have plans for three more in the spring. Can you make some money by having someone come and harvest the pine straw off the floor? It's pretty popular as garden mulch. I bet GP makes bank on the straw.
Looking good! I also planted some Select P3 Loblolly in February 2016 at my place in Georgia. When are you going to do your first thinning? I think my consulting forester told me 9 yrs which would be 2025, but I'm already getting ideas of which rows I want to come out in certain areas to widen plots, etc. Curious what your plan is
Thanks for the update. Curious, what part of Georgia are you in? We have acreage in Macon County and are just about to re-forest 80 acres with 3rd gen loblolly pines.
Yeah it looks about 10Ft The Rows look like 10 Yard Lines on a Football Field. 120 Yards on a Football Field counting The End Zones. I Can't Wait For My Pine to get That Tall and Dense It was Planted October of 2022, So it's Still a Sapling, I'm just an Impatient Jellicle. I give it another 3 - 4 years Give or take, I guess it depends on The Pine and The Weather, We had a Stage 4 Drought this Year, Now we're getting into The Rainy Season, things should pick up. I don't know The Genus of my Pine.
If he is buying seedlings from any sort of reputable source, and he is as he is buying seedlings from a commercial grower, these are probably 3rd generation improved loblolly pines. These trees are bred from the best growing stock available, and are going to grow a lot faster than most wild loblolly. Also, if this was an old pasture or farm field, there is residual fertilizer that really gets loblolly growing. Yes, site matters, too, and a clay loam is about as good as it gets for loblolly growth. If he has access to a soil survey, he may have a site index of 75 to 90 for these trees at index age, which is sometimes given at 25 years, but more typically 50 in the old soil surveys.
Thank you for not planting too close to the power line😅 I trim trees for the power company and its super annoying when tree farms plant within or bordering the right of way❤
They are ridiculously fast growing! Guessing its the wonderful climate there
Awesome update on the ol' Pine trees Buck!! Doesn't seem like it was that long ago
that they were planted wow !! *Have a good'nnn*
Awesome video. Thanks for taking the time to show the growth progress!
That was way bigger than I was expecting. We have a pine tree on my parents property about 40 miles south of the grand canyon that has grown about a foot and a half in about 20 years.
Yes, totally different environment like you say. Thanks for watching
VERY cool. Thank you for uploading the updates. Time is very valuable so videos like these are just so valuable and cool.
Thanks for the video !!! It looks amazing… I still remember when you first plant them
Wow. Awsome. I love your video and your trees.
Fast-growing and beautiful. You gonna chop them all down? :(
That is truly amazing ..... beautiful country you own......
Beautiful, fast growing trees.
I have two planted on my urban 1/2 acre, and I have plans for three more in the spring.
Can you make some money by having someone come and harvest the pine straw off the floor?
It's pretty popular as garden mulch.
I bet GP makes bank on the straw.
Cool! It is possible to have the straw raked, but it is difficult to find someone trustworthy to do the work. Thanks for watching!
Looking good! I also planted some Select P3 Loblolly in February 2016 at my place in Georgia. When are you going to do your first thinning? I think my consulting forester told me 9 yrs which would be 2025, but I'm already getting ideas of which rows I want to come out in certain areas to widen plots, etc. Curious what your plan is
In 6 years! Dude, they are growing really fast. I live in Russia and here for this consistency pines needed 15-17 years!
We have ideal weather for pine trees, thanks for watching
Wow Matt those grew fast!
Thanks for the update. Curious, what part of Georgia are you in? We have acreage in Macon County and are just about to re-forest 80 acres with 3rd gen loblolly pines.
Nice progress. When they were planted, did they have a hard time competing with the field grass that was there?
No affect at all. 👍
Beautiful ranch
Congratulations
Great video they grew fast how many acres do you own
Wow looks Awesome seems like yesterday
Yeah it looks about 10Ft The Rows look like 10 Yard Lines on a Football Field. 120 Yards on a Football Field counting The End Zones. I Can't Wait For My Pine to get That Tall and Dense It was Planted October of 2022, So it's Still a Sapling, I'm just an Impatient Jellicle. I give it another 3 - 4 years Give or take, I guess it depends on The Pine and The Weather, We had a Stage 4 Drought this Year, Now we're getting into The Rainy Season, things should pick up. I don't know The Genus of my Pine.
Pine trees are the best
Wow!
What if you pruned them
Nice
I remember planting.
How much does a 50 ft tall tree cost pine tree
What is your secret to making them grow so fast or is that just how that species is?
Georgia red clay I guess. Also they had no competition. 👍
If he is buying seedlings from any sort of reputable source, and he is as he is buying seedlings from a commercial grower, these are probably 3rd generation improved loblolly pines. These trees are bred from the best growing stock available, and are going to grow a lot faster than most wild loblolly. Also, if this was an old pasture or farm field, there is residual fertilizer that really gets loblolly growing. Yes, site matters, too, and a clay loam is about as good as it gets for loblolly growth. If he has access to a soil survey, he may have a site index of 75 to 90 for these trees at index age, which is sometimes given at 25 years, but more typically 50 in the old soil surveys.
What kind of pine??
Loblolly
What do you do after you grow your trees
Do you market the pine straw?
No, most straw folks prefer long needle pine straw.
Now that you mention it, I remember that.👍
I wonder how much you sell them plus shipping cost?