http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444233104577593571278706402.html
Pretty interesting stuff.
Jon
Pretty interesting stuff.
Jon
Nigel said:More genetic engineering is good news??????
Nigel said:genetic engineering is good news??????
Jonhilgen said:They're making them disease resistant, not turning them into Ents. Treebeard isn't going to show up and start throwing rocks at the Capitol...
ericbuggeln said:We actually had one of the oldest chestnut trees in CT in my backyard. It was such a specimen that my arborist buddy brought other local arborists over to see it. In the fall i. Would shed the chestnuts, which is a spiked ball that the Devil invented. I used a chisel and hammer to get at the chestnuts. I ate a few. They were bitter, never roasted them. It would have been a time consuming process.
Last fall we had a freak snow storm in early fall in CT, while the leaves were still on the trees and suffered unbelievable limb damage. Five trees had to be removed including the chestnut, which lost 80% of its limbs. Our property looked like we had been hit with bombs. We lost power for nine days, i was out of work due to power loss for seven days. It was a big mess.
Secretly i am not sad to not have to clean up those spiked balls this year, Eric
RMW said:Nigel said:More genetic engineering is good news??????
It's a viable solution to a real problem, if the alternative is to no longer have Chestnut trees.
See "Norman Borlaug/wheat"
RMW
andvari said:Nigel said:genetic engineering is good news??????
How else are you going to feed 10 billion people?
ericbuggeln said:There are so many reasons why i dont. The tree was barely standing on its own. It was rotting from the inside out. It was also "bleeding" a black tar like substance. It was hardly standing. My arborist friend has a friend with a Woodmizer who specializes in this type of thing and he said after 15 yrs of working with him, it wasnt even worth his time to look at it. I will try to find pics, but if you saw this thing, there was very little harvestable lumber. Unless you lived in a small section of CT, you have no idea what a natural disaster this was. Nearly a year later my friend is still cleaning properties. Sorry to disappoint, Eric