Acorns Driving me NUTS

   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #21  
Anybody else have an oak over their house? Dadgum acorns falling and rolling down the roof is getting old. Sure glad I don't have a metal roof.

Rumor has it that lots of acorns means we will have a severe winter. We have had lots of acorns every year but seems like more than ever.
I'd NEVER have a tree so close to my house that it could fall and damage my roof!. too many people in my neighborhood had that happen after a big rain, then a high windstorm, or hurricane!. I get acorns from my neighbors trees though, it really sucks, along with the fallen leaves, and dead branches that break off and present a life hazard!. get hit with one of those, and it's goodbye forever!..
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #22  
When we built the house we centered it between the back property line and the 50' easement across the front of our 2 acre lot.

What kind of antenna is that?
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #23  
Oaks are split into two main groups. The Red Oaks take two years to produce acorns. So, you will have acorns every other year with the Red Oak group. Oaks in the White Oak group have acorns every year.

What I read is that while red oak acorns take two years to mature, the tree flowers every year, and can set fruit every year. So you can get red oak acorns off of a tree every single year, even though they take two years to mature. Does that make sense?
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS
  • Thread Starter
#24  
What kind of antenna is that?

Antennas Direct 8 bay bow tie on an Eagle Aspen rotater. Rotater is no longer made but it's been a good one. Gets its power and signal direct through the coax so no extra wiring was required.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS
  • Thread Starter
#25  
Oh, and that little pine I stuck up by the snowman will get pulled up after Christmas. I just planted it for decoration. No way I'm gonna let a pine grow that close to the house.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #26  
My mom is a tree hoarder. You can't see her house from Google Earth as it is concealed completely under a canopy of huge trees. She constantly complains about the giant carpenter ants crawling in her house, boxelder beetles, sticks, nuts, moss, and the leaves, leaves, leaves! I tell her every time, there is a solution to this problem but she will not hear of it...the trees are too precious to her. At age 93 she still rakes the entire yard (2 acres of yard..no joke) and picks up leaves with her bagger on the lawn tractor.

She won't even pull out the tiny cedar tree seedlings in her yard! Come on! A cedar tree?? Really?? Cedar trees are nothing but a woody weed that needs to be eradicated.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #27  
She won't even pull out the tiny cedar tree seedlings in her yard! Come on! A cedar tree?? Really?? Cedar trees are nothing but a woody weed that needs to be eradicated.


I dig Cedars! In more ways than one. I dig up the seedlings and transplant them so I can trim them into hedges. Perfect year 'round green hedge - nice, thick, lush. They end up thick enough that deer can't get through them. I've also used some bigger branches for firewood when I trim the larger trees as they give off a nice aroma in the wood stove. The ends of those branches work great for kindling in brush pile burns. And then there are the aromatic blocks in closets and drawers that people pay for in stores. I've used a few pieces in woodworking projects too.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #28  
What I read is that while red oak acorns take two years to mature, the tree flowers every year, and can set fruit every year. So you can get red oak acorns off of a tree every single year, even though they take two years to mature. Does that make sense?

I believe you are right! I did not think of that angle.

I have some large oaks around my place. Give me oaks any day compared to pine trees. Pines belong in the woods and oaks are fine in the yard. I cut all my pines down except for four. A constant rain of pine straw, pine cones and debris. Don't park under the darn things. You guys must not have any pine trees in your yards. If you did, you would be welcoming the oaks. Pines are only good for pulp.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS #29  
You think acorns are bad, try getting inundated by the fruit of Liquidambar styraciflua (sweetgum, star-leaved gum, alligator-wood, gumtree, redgum) or gumballs.
They are as heavy as walnuts but a carpet of them on concrete makes walking VERY difficult, I can easily wiggle my foot into a layer of walnuts but the gumballs hang together. Not only that but when you mill the tree the wood sometimes ties itself in knots.

At least most oaks are good for milling.
 
   / Acorns Driving me NUTS
  • Thread Starter
#30  
Ahhhhhh, Sweetgums! Had a large one in my front yard. Took it down when I clear cut the pines. I think it was Jerry Clower that called the Sweetgum fruit porcupine eggs. :)
 

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