Establishing a Pecan Nut tree orchard. Part 2

in trees •  6 years ago  (edited)

Once climate and soil conditions have been determined to be suitable then the work of preparing the ground starts in earnest.

The soil need to be well drained because pecans do not like to have wet feet. If they have too much water in the root zone their roots start to rot and die.

After determining that soil is sufficiently drained then its a simple matter of adding nutrients or balancing the soil elements out to an acceptable level with soil amendments.

Well drained soils are often sandy soils and these are likely to be low in calcium, organic material and nitrogen.

One of the simplest and most natural ways to get much of these into the soil is with compost.

But to get the necessary compost in you need to dig a really big hole.

The hole has to be squared with corners to prevent the roots from growing in circles due to following the path of least resistance.

These can be dug by hand but a back-actor is faster.

After a lot of hard work you end up with lines of holes and heaps of sand.

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Thank you for posting @gavvet.

What a lot of work.....indeed.

Wishing you much success......a Pecan tree is a lovely sight in its prime.

Cheers!

Nice post. I really hope if we follow each other

Brother's excellent post, always brother's success

Que delicado este cultivo, usa el compost normal o utiliza alguno especial.
que tiempo dura la planta.
Supongo eres ingeniero agronomo o solo te gusta la agricultura

Another good tip is to prune the tree and the roots before planting. This will encourage strong growth.

It is a great space to plant those plants I hope your crop will be of and get the materials you need to make the salary richer protein!

My parents farm pecans. These are their trees. E24306A7-51B5-4470-B611-54100CEED411.jpeg
I love being home! Actually my Dad made me carry a pecan, from the orchard, through my deployment to Iraq for luck.