The hardest part of this is the selling them ;) I'm on twenty wooded acres in Michigan. White pine, red and white oak, dogwood, sassafras, black cherry, redbud. They plant themselves and all I have to do is dig them up and market them ;)
I don't doubt for a second that there is good money in small trees. I find the hustle the fun part. I had a neighbor that sold 20lbs of beach rock with a coffee dispenser as "heat therapy rocks" to massage parlors for $100 plus shipping. I'm a "parter" myself. I buy perfectly good power tools. part them, and sell them as repair parts.
Boy , I wish I could dig them up and sell them.That is easy money $ indeed. Wow , ur so lucky to have them in ur back yard my friend.Happy digging!!!🙂✌️Nice video.🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂I love ❤️ ur hat.How cool is that !
Redbuds, pecans, maples, locust, boxelder, sweetgum, Eastern red cedar, American elm and Eastern hackberry are our usual 'weeds'. This time of year, I mark them with colored tape so that I can identify them after they go dormant to sell as bare root trees, or transplant into larger containers to grow out. The Pecans need grafting, but the others sell as they are, with some pruning to fit the box. Beyond that, Rose of Sharon and mulberry are super easy to clone, and so are Muscadine grape vines .. and those are pretty easy to get rid of, too! The 'who would want to buy that' comments floor me 🤣 My wife hates locusts, I don't care for cedars all that much .. but there are trees that we have bought - even got on a waiting list for - and some of those, I'm sure someone else would not want. We all have different preferences, and that works great for me. Buy my weeds! 👍👍
Yeah here in South Carolina it’s a invasive species, it’s everywhere but people around here plant them in their yards. I don’t care for them they smell in the spring and branches break easy in a storm leaving a mess. Pennsylvania made a wise decision.
My grandfather owned 60 acres of woods all on a steep bluff, he died and now my dad and his siblings co-own it. Between my aunts, uncles, brothers, and cousins, there's over 20 people with a stake in 60 acres that are good for nothing but hunting, not a lot of wealth to go around. However, if I could find my way into the market of selling saplings this could be lucrative
Looks like you’re going to be doing more of these “hustle for that money” videos!! 🎉🎉🎉
The hardest part of this is the selling them ;) I'm on twenty wooded acres in Michigan. White pine, red and white oak, dogwood, sassafras, black cherry, redbud. They plant themselves and all I have to do is dig them up and market them ;)
I like your way of thinkin'! Great video!
I don't doubt for a second that there is good money in small trees. I find the hustle the fun part. I had a neighbor that sold 20lbs of beach rock with a coffee dispenser as "heat therapy rocks" to massage parlors for $100 plus shipping. I'm a "parter" myself. I buy perfectly good power tools. part them, and sell them as repair parts.
@@rochrich1223 beach rocks that’s awesome, there so many different ways to make easy money. Thanks for sharing
Boy , I wish I could dig them up and sell them.That is easy money $ indeed. Wow , ur so lucky to have them in ur back yard my friend.Happy digging!!!🙂✌️Nice video.🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂I love ❤️ ur hat.How cool is that !
I was a bit apprehensive heading into this but as soon as you opened a beer I was like hell yihh
@@Cons_Piracy_Theorist that’s the only way I do it, Extreme!
Redbuds, pecans, maples, locust, boxelder, sweetgum, Eastern red cedar, American elm and Eastern hackberry are our usual 'weeds'. This time of year, I mark them with colored tape so that I can identify them after they go dormant to sell as bare root trees, or transplant into larger containers to grow out. The Pecans need grafting, but the others sell as they are, with some pruning to fit the box. Beyond that, Rose of Sharon and mulberry are super easy to clone, and so are Muscadine grape vines .. and those are pretty easy to get rid of, too!
The 'who would want to buy that' comments floor me 🤣 My wife hates locusts, I don't care for cedars all that much .. but there are trees that we have bought - even got on a waiting list for - and some of those, I'm sure someone else would not want. We all have different preferences, and that works great for me. Buy my weeds! 👍👍
Great content and I agree . As a side note bradford pear is banned in Pennsylvania
Yeah here in South Carolina it’s a invasive species, it’s everywhere but people around here plant them in their yards. I don’t care for them they smell in the spring and branches break easy in a storm leaving a mess. Pennsylvania made a wise decision.
@@crazyadventuresandreviewsyeah,here in Oklahoma they switched to Chinese Pistache, climate tolerant and beautiful fall color.
Have you ever shipped tree? If trees have character and movement in the trunk may be good for pre bonsai💯
@@nikolaisprinklingno, never packaged a tree and had it shipped
If you ever in sumter ill drink a beer with ya and share some plants and what not🤙
I hope it's legal to sell those trees where you live. Many places in the US require a permit.
Thanx
SweetBay magnolia is your mystery tree
@@lunarrn those are nice, to bad I dont have enough of them growing to take. Maybe in a few years they will populate some.
@@crazyadventuresandreviews I like them because they have large white flowers and the bark is Medicinal
Uh oh… watch out… the government might show up if you dig stuff on your own property! 😂😂😂
Is this “digging trees” game available in 8-bit or 16-bit?
Then we’re talking!!
🌲😂
I should have known Charleston pinball would come around 😂
Step 1 buy a property
I have Hardie Plank trees and Trex trees in my yard! Waaaay more valuable than that cedar junk… 😂
😂
So, you are giving side hustle ideas to land owners who have a forest of their own? 🤣🤣🤣
And a landscaping company.
Kind of, or family and friends may own land but I guess this video doesn’t really help someone who doesn’t have land.
My grandfather owned 60 acres of woods all on a steep bluff, he died and now my dad and his siblings co-own it. Between my aunts, uncles, brothers, and cousins, there's over 20 people with a stake in 60 acres that are good for nothing but hunting, not a lot of wealth to go around. However, if I could find my way into the market of selling saplings this could be lucrative