Restoring the Ozark Chinquapin (PART 2) w/ AJ Hendershott | Ep. 121 | The Ozark Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • We're joined by A.J. Hendershott of the Missouri Department of Conservation to discuss the initial loss and current restoration of the Ozark Chinquapin and WHY outdoorsman should care! This is PART 2 of our 2-PART series over the Ozark Chinquapin. Enjoy!
    Check out the Ozark Chinquapin Foundation to get involved!
    ozarkchinquapi...
    The Ozark podcast sits down with men and women from the Ozarks who have a passion for the outdoors. Our aim is to listen, learn, and pass along their knowledge and experiences to help you become a better outdoorsman.
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    #ozarks #arkansas #missouri #oklahoma #kansas #podcast #listen #chinquapin #ozarkchinquapin #forestmanagement #conservation

Комментарии • 4

  • @Yelladog78
    @Yelladog78 26 дней назад

    You guys are killing it with these podcast

    • @theozarkpodcast
      @theozarkpodcast  25 дней назад +1

      Appreciate that! Glad they're adding value to you.

  • @jesseandersen4055
    @jesseandersen4055 Месяц назад +1

    It was the american chestnut that got me first. And really the two are identical in terms of their impact on both wildlife and our lives, but its that one tree could provide so many of the necessities of life. The american chestnut grew tall and straight over 100 ft and over 10 feet wide, with wood thats about as rot resistant as wood comes, making it the ideal timber tree. Ive read stories from the late 1800s of people living in cities who would take a vacation to the country side to collect chestnuts, and theyd make more money selling those chestnuts than they would from working that week. Also 1 in 3 trees was an american chestnut in the appalachian forests, it just blows me away that a forest tree could provide as much food if not more than crops we grow ourselves. Its hard to imagine that a forest as large as the forests of the eastern us could change so rapidly, in under a century, when castanea had been the dominant species for thousands of years, and theyve been around for millions.

  • @philipbundy2245
    @philipbundy2245 2 месяца назад

    Speaking of the tap root. I am not a biologist, but I did take a vacation to see the giant sequoias in California. They explained that the giant sequoias do not have tap roots either. They put on runners like you are talking about.
    Are they related perhaps...???