rogdan
Gold Member
I heard on NPR yesterday that Home Depot is selling and American strain of elm that is naturally resistant to Dutch Elm disease. I believe the researcher who has been working on this said it came from Connecticut but I'm not sure. I plan to check out my local HP but I bet it is pricey.
This got me to thinking about the American chestnut as well and wondered if anything new had been developed in the way of its recovery. The last I heard a year or two ago was failure at the plan of sucessive crossing with the Chinese chestnut. They had planned to cross until they arrived at a high 90% American version that retained the blight resistance of the Chinese. I am planting trees at out new house site now and would love to plant a couple of the elms if it were half way reasonable price and success wise.
This got me to thinking about the American chestnut as well and wondered if anything new had been developed in the way of its recovery. The last I heard a year or two ago was failure at the plan of sucessive crossing with the Chinese chestnut. They had planned to cross until they arrived at a high 90% American version that retained the blight resistance of the Chinese. I am planting trees at out new house site now and would love to plant a couple of the elms if it were half way reasonable price and success wise.