Ah! :-)
It's already much more interesting!
Which fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Yes, the years when I manage to harvest the leaves, I make pesto!
I also take a few rhizomes every year...
I also take a few rhizomes every year...
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Christophe wrote:Yes, the years when I manage to harvest the leaves, I make pesto!
I also take a few rhizomes every year...
Horseradish pesto? Heck, that would look more like Wasabi than Italian sauce!
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Absolutely, but my parents make an excellent wild garlic pesto...in the end, it's not very far from that of horseradish.
The leaves are still less strong than the roots and they lose their power quite quickly... you have to fix the "spiciness" in the oil quickly...
The leaves are still less strong than the roots and they lose their power quite quickly... you have to fix the "spiciness" in the oil quickly...
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Christophe wrote:Absolutely, but my parents make an excellent wild garlic pesto...in the end, it's not very far from that of horseradish.
The leaves are still less strong than the roots and they lose their power quite quickly... you have to fix the "spiciness" in the oil quickly...
Horseradish? I like.
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Christophe wrote:During the planting project in January, I made a (very) severe cut of my apple tree (wobbly eh Remundo ) of 15 years old who had never given more than a dozen apples a year in good years, most of the time 2 or 3 "edible"...
During the cut I ravaged the entire right side of the tree and removed all the internal branches...
As a result, this year...it's an orgy of apples!
Harvested yesterday: 13 kg!
View: sustainable-consumption/trace-of-rot-on-the-surface-of-my-non-organic-apples-t17305.html#p512234
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
The situation almost day for day after 1 year, thirty-two beaver attacks , 1 summer drought and 3 heat waves...
a) I'm not sure but I estimate at 50% the losses on the small aspen trees (I have nothing br... level of watering...mea culpa)...to see the survivors in the spring of 2023... (a good natural selection...)
b) The plançons that survived the beavers, it's not great...only a few small branches...here too the drought did not help despite the nearby stream...
c) On the other hand, the Willows on the North side have grown well...
To compare to the photo of January 2022:
d) On the locust side, the best growth was in the northern grove.
This strangely since the Robinia needs Sun from what I had understood (???) and the 2 feet in this northern grove were the least exposed: the 2 feet culminate at 2.5 m for the main stem. (drought or biological control may explain this?)
In photos it looks like this.
I have indicated in red the waist line in 2022 on the Willows and the foot of Robinier HS which has not resumed...
1 of the 2 locusts in the northern grove:
The willows in the northern grove with size line:
Row of Robinia on EAST slope:
The rest in 6 months at the end of spring!
a) I'm not sure but I estimate at 50% the losses on the small aspen trees (I have nothing br... level of watering...mea culpa)...to see the survivors in the spring of 2023... (a good natural selection...)
b) The plançons that survived the beavers, it's not great...only a few small branches...here too the drought did not help despite the nearby stream...
c) On the other hand, the Willows on the North side have grown well...
To compare to the photo of January 2022:
d) On the locust side, the best growth was in the northern grove.
This strangely since the Robinia needs Sun from what I had understood (???) and the 2 feet in this northern grove were the least exposed: the 2 feet culminate at 2.5 m for the main stem. (drought or biological control may explain this?)
In photos it looks like this.
I have indicated in red the waist line in 2022 on the Willows and the foot of Robinier HS which has not resumed...
1 of the 2 locusts in the northern grove:
The willows in the northern grove with size line:
Row of Robinia on EAST slope:
The rest in 6 months at the end of spring!
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
Didn't you put too close to the house, with the roots?
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hmmmmm, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm, hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmmm, huh, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
The northern grove has always been there…I just added the 2 Robinia…
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Re: What fast-growing tree species in a garden to have the equivalent of 0.5 to 1 stere of wood per year?
I say because, my little low wall at the entrance of the house, in places, with the roots of the trees, is deformed quite a bit.
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hmmmmm, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm, hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmmm, huh, hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
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