Old saying about planting perennials: the first year it sleeps, the second it creeps, the third year it leaps. Root growth has to come before top growth in order to support it.
I stuck cardboard and wood mulch around my trees and the new ever bearing dwarf mulberry. It got broken in by the deer 2 days after I put it in and it’s only got a few leaves left. One whole grow bag of sweet potatoes got munched on but other 5 not a bite
Don't you just love having a place where you can move trees, bushes etc and put them where you want them. Starting from scratch has big advantages. Pecan Grove is shaping up to be a real paradise for you and Ms. Wanda.
Years ago, i lived in San Francisco. I had a horrible cough one winter, and the tiny, old Burmese lady who owned the corner store noticed. She gave me a dried, shriveled up fruit and told me to eat it. It sort of tasted like cough syrup. My cough immediately went away. It was dried loquat! 😊
The growth is so exciting to see & moving the trees is something that I would not have thought possible. I am glad you have been able to move so many of the trees from Deep South. It's like moving a food investment LOL
Good morning Ms Wanda and Mr Danny. You sure been working hard on Pecan Grove with transplanting and planting and sure show’s beautifully. God bless you both❤
I thought the same thing when I first started growing hazelnuts. They put on those in the fall. I made the mistake of trimming during that time. The following spring/summer I didn't get any nuts.
Really nice video. I enjoyed seeing and hearing about all the trees you’ve been transplanting to Pecan Grove. Everything looks just lovely where you have planted everything and placed your outbuildings.
I sure hope you transplanting your trees to pecan grow turn out successful for you. With all you have and you take such good care of it with pride. God bless you and Wanda.
I have two big pecan trees and they've just started dropping.. some are pretty green and on the ground already. I'm picking them up as I find them.. I haven't made a solid project out of it yet.... soon. I had a big limb break and it's hanging down to the ground, but still attached and green. I'll do some heavy pruning this winter, when it goes dormant. The barn cat loves the new tunnel between the trunk and the downed limb. It's his new spot.
I love the tour of all the trees and bushes and plants you have what a beautiful pecan Grove you have. I heard you talk about a mulberry tree. I have four mulberry trees growing in my yard. only one is a female which produces fruit which I value I do believe my female needs at least one male mulberry tree in the vicinity. My problem is there extremely invasive I live in Maryland. I am in a day, pulling up roots and shoots anywhere everywhere on my property I regret having them mulberry tree.
Dig circular trench in ground to match tree perimeter. Water there. Ideal for granular fertilizer. Rain will hold much better too. Swales & if necessary water bottles inverted into soil. Can partially bury bottles w/ holes at bottom for slow release. Caps up, easy refill. Hazelnuts shd do fine there. *Cats dug up all my bergamot mints.; pulled 'em straight out of the ground. After 3x replanting, I took their hint, sigh. *Morning Glories twirl tight around neighboring stems; took 2.yrs to get rid of the few I had. -- 💌🍒
The tree with hard knots looks kind of like a macadamia. If it is, you are mighty lucky! The nuts are delicious, but hard to open. There is a softer green outer shell and a very hard brown inner shell. We had one at our old house.
I really enjoyed hearing about how well your transplanted blueberry bushes produced this season. This reminds me I have some nice big Elliott blueberries I need to harvest today!
When I lived in the Seattle area, I remember seeing Himalayan blackberries. In the Pacific Northwest, they are considered noxious invasives, they grow rampantly, and they produce more fruit than the bears, birds, bugs, and people can eat, so much of the fruit turns into raisins on the plant.
I love that log! Ms Wanda you have done an amazing job with the plants around it. It’s going to be stunning when they grow out good. We have muck red clay and a high water table. We have a hard time keeping trees alive here, even when we backfill with good soil and fertilize. It’s disheartening. Shalom
The tree at 5 minutes in looks like an olive tree. In some places you need to protect them by wrapping with burlap in the winter. Where y'all live you might just be able to put it in the greenhouse and not wrap with burlap. I live in zone 7 in NC and I have olive trees in pots that I bring inside during the winter. The ones I have are supposedly cold tolerant down to 5 degrees as long as protected with burlap. But we get negative temps a couple days a year so I'm scared to lose them if I leave them outside over the winter.
Nice tour of all your trees!! I've come to the conclusion that you must have a different type of mulberry trees than we do up north! Here they are basically for the birds to eat as they don't have much flavor to them at all except a slight sweetness. They do bear a lot of fruit on them but tasteless.
We have started fall colors already. Here in Virginia, yellows started a good week ago and today I see red starting. Fall colors starting in mid August.
P/g here, Patriot Gallery, You can down load an app that identifies plants from your cell phone . We used it for plants around our house to identify them. It only messes up when the plant is kin of the same, spearmint, perpermit, lemon balm. It doesn't identify correctly.
I have found about a dozen varieties of apples that will thrive in your area. For pollination and production, the more, the better. It wouldn’t hurt to let the seedling apple fruit at least once to see what it does. It MIGHT have a superior fruit.
Many say they will but will only grow a tree not fruit. The Anna, ein shemier, dorrset golden I know do good here. I am interested in in some of those that grow in Florida.
Good morning, y'all. I have a Brown Turkey fig tree that I have had for 2 years now. It's growing in a large flower pot. I got a few figs last year and 3 this year. I have ants real bad and they seem to love fig trees.
I’m still searching for the best hazelnuts for your area. The best suppliers are all sold out until next year, and they sell out QUICKLY. I’m looking to send y’all a food forest of varieties from nut pines to pistachios, inclusive. Fair warning: anything you mention that you want, I will consider fair game, even if it takes me years.
If I recall aright, hazelnut seedlings need shade to start, as do many other plants. I’m surprised that they aren’t dead from too much sun. I have pawpaw seeds with premium genetics, but they MUST have shade to start, they HATE to be transplanted, and they are understory trees for lowland areas. You could try some in uncleared areas if you like. The price is right, just say yes or no.
Old saying about planting perennials: the first year it sleeps, the second it creeps, the third year it leaps. Root growth has to come before top growth in order to support it.
So glad the moved trees are doing so well. I was praying you wouldn't lose them.
I stuck cardboard and wood mulch around my trees and the new ever bearing dwarf mulberry. It got broken in by the deer 2 days after I put it in and it’s only got a few leaves left. One whole grow bag of sweet potatoes got munched on but other 5 not a bite
Don't you just love having a place where you can move trees, bushes etc and put them where you want them. Starting from scratch has big advantages. Pecan Grove is shaping up to be a real paradise for you and Ms. Wanda.
Years ago, i lived in San Francisco. I had a horrible cough one winter, and the tiny, old Burmese lady who owned the corner store noticed. She gave me a dried, shriveled up fruit and told me to eat it. It sort of tasted like cough syrup. My cough immediately went away. It was dried loquat! 😊
The growth is so exciting to see & moving the trees is something that I would not have thought possible. I am glad you have been able to move so many of the trees from Deep South. It's like moving a food investment LOL
It happens in the fall...there called catcumes from hazelnuts.
Good morning Ms Wanda and Mr Danny. You sure been working hard on Pecan Grove with transplanting and planting and sure show’s beautifully. God bless you both❤
Thanks so much you two!!! 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🕊️🕊️🕊️❤️❤️❤️
Love all the flowers fruit trees and Vines you all have worked hard to make the place productive and beautiful ❤❤❤
Amazing how well everything you moved is doing so well. Blessed.
Wise men plant trees for themselves and future generations. Well done.🙏💞
I thought the same thing when I first started growing hazelnuts. They put on those in the fall. I made the mistake of trimming during that time. The following spring/summer I didn't get any nuts.
I love transplanting trees! It is so fun dreaming and planning out its new home!
WOW! The sugarcane is so impressive!!!! ❤
When I was a kid my Grandma would give us a dishpan of soap to blow bubbles using the morning glory blooms:)
That is awesome! Im gonna try it.❤
Really nice video. I enjoyed seeing and hearing about all the trees you’ve been transplanting to Pecan Grove. Everything looks just lovely where you have planted everything and placed your outbuildings.
This was a great tour. Love Pecan Grove. Your hard work is paying off.
God bless
So much of Deep South trees desire a to make the move with you. May the Lord bless the move you both.
All the plants are looking nice!
It’s looking good! It’s really coming along
I sure hope you transplanting your trees to pecan grow turn out successful for you. With all you have and you take such good care of it with pride. God bless you and Wanda.
I have two big pecan trees and they've just started dropping.. some are pretty green and on the ground already. I'm picking them up as I find them.. I haven't made a solid project out of it yet.... soon.
I had a big limb break and it's hanging down to the ground, but still attached and green. I'll do some heavy pruning this winter, when it goes dormant.
The barn cat loves the new tunnel between the trunk and the downed limb. It's his new spot.
❤❤❤Nice Food Forest!!! Billy Bonds at Permapastures has a special on Comfrey that you could plant around your fruit trees.
We grow comfrey
I love the tour of all the trees and bushes and plants you have what a beautiful pecan Grove you have. I heard you talk about a mulberry tree. I have four mulberry trees growing in my yard. only one is a female which produces fruit which I value I do believe my female needs at least one male mulberry tree in the vicinity. My problem is there extremely invasive I live in Maryland. I am in a day, pulling up roots and shoots anywhere everywhere on my property I regret having them mulberry tree.
Maybe it's a buckeye tree?
Dig circular trench in ground to match tree perimeter. Water there. Ideal for granular fertilizer. Rain will hold much better too. Swales & if necessary water bottles inverted into soil. Can partially bury bottles w/ holes at bottom for slow release. Caps up, easy refill. Hazelnuts shd do fine there. *Cats dug up all my bergamot mints.; pulled 'em straight out of the ground. After 3x replanting, I took their hint, sigh. *Morning Glories twirl tight around neighboring stems; took 2.yrs to get rid of the few I had. -- 💌🍒
The tree with hard knots looks kind of like a macadamia. If it is, you are mighty lucky! The nuts are delicious, but hard to open. There is a softer green outer shell and a very hard brown inner shell. We had one at our old house.
I really enjoyed hearing about how well your transplanted blueberry bushes produced this season. This reminds me I have some nice big Elliott blueberries I need to harvest today!
Everything is amazing 💝👍👍💝
I absolutely love your new property. You have inspired me in so many ways. Sending love from Missouri ❤
When I lived in the Seattle area, I remember seeing Himalayan blackberries. In the Pacific Northwest, they are considered noxious invasives, they grow rampantly, and they produce more fruit than the bears, birds, bugs, and people can eat, so much of the fruit turns into raisins on the plant.
I love that log! Ms Wanda you have done an amazing job with the plants around it. It’s going to be stunning when they grow out good. We have muck red clay and a high water table. We have a hard time keeping trees alive here, even when we backfill with good soil and fertilize. It’s disheartening.
Shalom
The tree at 5 minutes in looks like an olive tree. In some places you need to protect them by wrapping with burlap in the winter. Where y'all live you might just be able to put it in the greenhouse and not wrap with burlap. I live in zone 7 in NC and I have olive trees in pots that I bring inside during the winter. The ones I have are supposedly cold tolerant down to 5 degrees as long as protected with burlap. But we get negative temps a couple days a year so I'm scared to lose them if I leave them outside over the winter.
Youguys have the most amazing subscribers...they send you trees. That is so kewl.
Love watching this. Very informative
Wanda, you can take a picture of your tree on Google and then search it to find out what kind it is.
It will be interesting what kind of weather we get during the winter. Seems like young trees like shade and a little sun not too much.
Nice tour of all your trees!! I've come to the conclusion that you must have a different type of mulberry trees than we do up north! Here they are basically for the birds to eat as they don't have much flavor to them at all except a slight sweetness. They do bear a lot of fruit on them but tasteless.
These are very sweet.
Good morning! Everything looks beautiful at Pecan Grove!
We have started fall colors already. Here in Virginia, yellows started a good week ago and today I see red starting. Fall colors starting in mid August.
P/g here, Patriot Gallery, You can down load an app that identifies plants from your cell phone . We used it for plants around our house to identify them. It only messes up when the plant is kin of the same, spearmint, perpermit, lemon balm. It doesn't identify correctly.
Nice aet up. Something to always keep you busy!
??? maybe that plant with the berries could be to Tea Plant (camelia)
Love all the pecan trees 🌳
Love the large open grassy area looks so good
Trees all look so nice.
This is from hard work from yall ...I enjoy seeing it all. God bless ❤
Praise God for all your trees !!!❤
The potted tree that someone sent you with the hard knots on it...could this be a Quince tree?
G'mornin'! The unknown tree looks very similar to a Camellia sinensis (Tea plant). It produces beautiful blooms. Happy homesteading! 🙏🏻❤️
Good morning. Have a beautiful day.
Ginkgo fruits are both edible and medicinal, and considered treats in their native countries. They are more than worth their “aroma.”
Just learned yesterday that catnip plants deter hornworms from tomatoes. IMO, it’s worth a try.
Good morning thanks for the video everything looks good. God bless.
Two questions
Why are the containment cages not over the trees?
What is a blueberry tree?
Sustainability is the way to go.
There to deter the deer. No need to put it over the tree. They grow blueberries there not bushes.
Look good 👍.
I have found about a dozen varieties of apples that will thrive in your area. For pollination and production, the more, the better. It wouldn’t hurt to let the seedling apple fruit at least once to see what it does. It MIGHT have a superior fruit.
Many say they will but will only grow a tree not fruit. The Anna, ein shemier, dorrset golden I know do good here. I am interested in in some of those that grow in Florida.
Good morning, y'all.
I have a Brown Turkey fig tree that I have had for 2 years now. It's growing in a large flower pot. I got a few figs last year and 3 this year. I have ants real bad and they seem to love fig trees.
Set the pot in a large lid with water to keep the ants out.
My app says that the plant with the little green fruits on it is a Tea bush
May I suggest more chop and drop mulch around trees and shrubs quite thick amount.
good morning over coffee. Yes, I hear you about the invasive mint.
The muscatine looks great!
Those trees are going to feed you for years!
Hey yall … everything looks pretty, and doing good
I like that old tree too
Looking good!
Just beautiful….another of God’s creation. 🌱💕👍🙏🙋🏻♀️
Beautiful!
I’m paying close attention to what you already have so I don’t duplicate.
Awesome. Blessings.
Did you film scooping up the trees? I would be interested in seeing how you did that
Yes, they did. It should be in the playlist.
Yes but we will probably do more.
The cicadas! Wow
Yeah there loud this time of the year.
@@pecangrovems loved It
Wanda, could it be a tea plant?
Is your mystery tree maybe a Black Sapote?
Wanda, could your plant be a Jerusalem Cherry?
Are y’all interested in asian pears or do you have some? They are listed as hardy in your area.
Yes
@@pecangrovems Yes you have some, or yes you want some? I just don’t want to duplicate.
Sounds like what id do withe dead tree
It is a tea camellia plant. also chinese or japanese tea plant
Yes
Why do you put the cages next to the Bush or tree?
To prevent deer from damaging them
Tea tree? At 5:00
That tree looks like a Quince tree
I’m still searching for the best hazelnuts for your area. The best suppliers are all sold out until next year, and they sell out QUICKLY. I’m looking to send y’all a food forest of varieties from nut pines to pistachios, inclusive. Fair warning: anything you mention that you want, I will consider fair game, even if it takes me years.
The american hazelnut is the one that grows here.
Good morning
Hey Danny and Wanda, is the background noise Cicadas? Always enjoy your videos!
Yes
If I recall aright, hazelnut seedlings need shade to start, as do many other plants. I’m surprised that they aren’t dead from too much sun. I have pawpaw seeds with premium genetics, but they MUST have shade to start, they HATE to be transplanted, and they are understory trees for lowland areas. You could try some in uncleared areas if you like. The price is right, just say yes or no.
I've never grown a paw paw.
@@pecangrovems Pawpaws grow themselves. All you need to do is put seeds in likely places and let them grow or die. I have LOTS of seeds.
Is that whirring noise the cicadas my goodness they are loud.
Plant net said your little tree with the knots on it was a camellia
🦋🇺🇸👍Good Morning Everyone
Your unknown bush looks like a camellia sinesis….leaves dried and used for tea (like Lipton tea)
Mine puts on those seed pod looking things…
Nothing grows good around A pine tree tryed it to many times
❤❤❤❤
Wanda? At 5:00 could that be a nutmeg ?
jujubee maybe?
Why is it that grafted trees grow and produce so much better than the original trees?
DEER DO NOT LIKE THE SMELL OF ROSEMARY. PUT SOME POTS OF THAT INTEGRATED WITH YOUR FLOWERS
Looks like a Nectarine tree.
🦋🇺🇸👍👍👍👍
I noticed that you and Wanda don't mention the Freesteading Community anymore. Is there something wrong with that group we should be aware of?
We're just so busy we haven't been there in a while.
Good morning
Morning