Tree Talk: Chestnut Oak

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2022
  • New year, new oak!! This Tree Talk highlights Quercus montana, chestnut oak. It is also called rock oak because of its typical ridgetop habitat. You may have learned it as Quercus prinus, but that name which Linnaeus gave the species hundreds of years ago may have been given to swamp chestnut oak instead; the correct identity of the type specimen is up for debate. So we typically now use Q. montana for chestnut oak and Q. michauxii for swamp chestnut oak.
    Name confusion aside, chestnut oak is a wonderful species that plays an important role in the canopy of ridgetop forests, where most other species cannot thrive in the thin, rocky soils. It is relished by wildlife and foresters alike, but like many other oaks, chestnut oak regeneration is scarce in forests that have been managed poorly and/or have overabundances of deer.
    Want more goods from the woods? Subscribe to this channel, and our monthly newsletter at forestsforthebay.org/newsletter_signup.cfm ! Who are we, anyway? Forests for the Bay is an educational program of the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the health of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed. Learn more at allianceforthebay.org.
    Recorded on 1/2/22 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania by Allyson "Rocky" Davis.
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Комментарии • 20

  • @stevemurray6543
    @stevemurray6543 2 года назад +6

    I have add this species to my botanical garden. Love them and looking forward to their increasingly size. Thank you for your work and videos. Much appreciated.

  • @chesterthawkins7510
    @chesterthawkins7510 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this video. I have a chestnut oak which I got as a seedling two years ago. I have been amazed at how well it is growing. They are beautiful trees.

  • @markjones5561
    @markjones5561 2 года назад +4

    Another great video! Thank you. Haven't been able to get to the woods for the last year as I damaged my leg, so good to see some tree action on these videos. Keep 'em coming :)

  • @michaeldinkins9145
    @michaeldinkins9145 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have some in south east Georgia in the flat woods along Spanish Creek

  • @williamcmaylo6597
    @williamcmaylo6597 8 месяцев назад +1

    I recently cut down a chestnut oak in order to make room for our grandchildren's clubhouse. I'd like to have the chestnut oak sawn into boards.

  • @GoneCarnivore
    @GoneCarnivore Год назад +2

    I plan to try to grow these in central Louisiana. It not rocky but worth a try.

  • @outdoorinfluencer
    @outdoorinfluencer 2 года назад +2

    Another great video

  • @MoldyStir-Fry
    @MoldyStir-Fry Год назад +2

    I have been looking for an actually good thorough description with visuals of this tree for a while, thank you! I've had some issues identifying some of the trees that we cut for firewood this year because it seems like rock oak wood looks very inconsistent from tree to tree, but the bark and leaves from when they were still living confirms their species.

  • @jessicagothie2951
    @jessicagothie2951 2 года назад +2

    These are really nice. I live in the ridge-n-valley section of PA, so these trees are really in my wheelhouse. (Fulton County, represent!) I can do *most* of our trees including understory stuff like spicebush and american hornbeam and such, but there's always more to learn. I like sycamore (they are so fancy!) and the shrubby sort-of-a-tree winterberry holly.

  • @drchrisgreene5418
    @drchrisgreene5418 Год назад +1

    Another great video! Thank you . This helps so much!! Keep up the good work! I hope to see the channel grow!! (:

  • @EmeraldForester777
    @EmeraldForester777 Год назад +1

    Lots of em in Twin Falls State Park, W. Va.

  • @kevinrose2474
    @kevinrose2474 8 месяцев назад

    Bark is hard and gritty and can cut and scratch anything that rubs against it

  • @AdaptiveApeHybrid
    @AdaptiveApeHybrid 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for posting! I love learning about the native trees and plants of the north east so much. You're very concise too which is my favorite kinda delivery for this stuff.
    Y'all got Hawthorne down there? I'm in western NY and we got what I believe to be Canadian Hawthorne everywhere. Very interesting tree/shrub imo. Not gonna twist your tit or anything but I'd love to see a video on that stuff. Also, I looked through your videos and I didn't see any hickory videos! I believe you guys got pignut and shagbark where you are, no? I'd love to see some stuff on those too. Also black locust!
    Not trying to be demanding, I just like your content and I want more lol

    • @forestsforthebay4784
      @forestsforthebay4784  2 года назад +3

      Thanks Mario!!
      Yep we have a few hawthorn species (making their ID tricky!) and several hickories. I plan to get to them all in time! One thing I'm running into with hickories is that I want to record the video in the autumn, when their leaves are so wonderfully golden, but I'm usually too busy planting trees in the fall to record Tree Talks! We'll get to them all eventually! 😁

  • @BuddhiYoga7
    @BuddhiYoga7 2 года назад

    Thanks, Ryan. Do you think white oaks, since they do so well in rocky soil, incorporates the silicates and other minerals and so are crystalline? They must act like antennas more than other trees. My land has endless white quartz everywhere among mostly white oaks. I feel it has a more special energy than other places.

  • @michaelbayerl1683
    @michaelbayerl1683 Год назад +1

    Any idea what's been killing of the chestnut oaks in the mid-Atlantic over the last 5-10 yrs? I live in central PA on a forested lot with rocky, dry soil, so there plenty of chestnut oaks and easily more than half have died and are continuing to die. I have managed to harvest some awesome lumber and firewood, but I'd really like to know what's been happening. I know this has been happening all over PA, MD, WV, DE, VA, and MD.

    • @forestsforthebay4784
      @forestsforthebay4784  Год назад

      This phenomenon is called "Oak Decline". It is the result of many stressors (climate, tree age, site conditions, disease) which combine to weaken trees to the point that they succumb to a disease, insect, or fungal infection.

    • @michaelbayerl1683
      @michaelbayerl1683 Год назад

      @@forestsforthebay4784 🙏

  • @rizwanzain1
    @rizwanzain1 Год назад +1

    Iske patte insan kha sakte hai kya

    • @forestsforthebay4784
      @forestsforthebay4784  Год назад +1

      nahin, pattiyaan jahareelee hotee hain. mainne googlai anuvaad ka upayog kiya, aasha hai ki mainne achchha kaam kiya hai!