From: wes@sscvx1 (Wes Smith) Subject: Re: Acorns/Oak propagation Date: Tue, 4 May 1993 19:50:12 GMT In article , "Curtis P. Yeske" wrote: > Does anyone have any hints on getting acorns to grow? My yields are > down around 1-2%. Most of the books I have looked at deal with > mature trees. Curt - The one time I tried growing acorns into trees, I had germination rates around 90%. Here's is what I did: 1. Mix potting soil / sand (for weight) in approx. 4:1 ratio. Specifically, I believe I mixed two large (3 cu ft, maybe?) bags of potting soil, one 50 lb bag of play sand. 2. Gather acorns as soon as they fall from the tree. I've read that germination rates will fall drastically if they are left on the ground even a couple of days. I actually gathered most of my acorns before they fell, as soon as I noticed others were beginning to fall. If your tree is small enough, shake the branches and gather only the ones that fall. 3. Take your newly gathered acorns and toss them into a bucket of water. Discard the "floaters". Those floating are likely hollowed out by worms and will not germinate. Inspect acorns for even small pin sized holes caused by same worms, discard if found. Only about 10%, maybe less, of the acorns I gathered showed no evidence of insect damage and were suitable for planting. IMO, this is the single most important step of the whole process. 3. Plant 3 acorns per container (I used 1 gallon containers, and repotted as they grew - less chance of overwatering a smaller container). Plant acorns point down at a depth equal to twice acorn length. To rephrase, there should be as much soil covering acorns as they are long, measuring point to cap. 4. Bring inside garage or basement whenever outside temperatures falls below 27 or 28 degrees. Container plants will be damaged at temperatures much higher than they could tolerate in the ground. You might get away with lower temperatures, I definitely could not as I was growing southern live oaks. Northern oak varieties no doubt can tolerate somewhat lower temperatures, but I wouldn't chance it personally. Protect from squirrels, they like to dig around in containers here. 5. Be patient in the spring. My oaks sprouted a good bit later than when my trees leafed out. Actually, I had already given up on them and they came up in spite of my neglect. Select strongest growing and carefully remove any others that come up. Re-pot when you notice roots growing out drain holes. 6. Fertilize "potted" trees with a water soluble fertilizer (like Miracle-Gro) at mixture rates lower than and less frequently than you would use for ground plants. Potted plant's roots are easy to burn. Don't overwater your trees, let the planting mixture almost dry out before watering again. Believe it or not, more of your trees will die from overwatering than underwatering. I didn't water a couple of leftover trees the second summer (in Dallas' heat, no less!!!) and they still made it through the following winter. Sorry if this is turned out to be a lot more than you really wanted to know, I can't help but get a little excited about this particular project. I grew up in Amarillo, TX where there are few (actually, none I'm aware of) native trees on the plains. Growing a tree from an acorn is easily the most satisfying gardening "experiment" I've attempted. No doubt your friends will appreciate your success as well. Trust me, you won't have any trouble giving them away. Good luck - Wes Smith (wes@sscvx1.ssc.gov)