gordon21
Veteran Member
X-mas tree farming It\'s really cheap to do!!
I have recently learned just how inexpensive it is to get a personal size small x-mas tree farm started. Frazier fir transplants run about a $1 each. You can easily plant 250 trees on one acre and leave space for roads between every 3rd or 4th row for the tractor. Push a shovel into the ground, rock it back and forth to make a V. Put the 15-18" tree into the V and tamp the V closed with your foot. Repeat 249 more times. Keep them watered and the real work begins in 3-4 years when you have to start shaping them. I may be off base, but it seems as though an initial $250 investment would yield more trees than you or your friends and family could ever use. 6-9 years later everyone can have a huge tree at no cost. Of course to keep the sizes flowing, you would want to plant another 50 every year to insure a steady supply down the road. Assuming crop loss due to numerous reasons, a start with 250 seems fair. Trees don't need flat or tilled land.
Perfect rows are not important. The rows can follow the land you have. What do you guys think?
I have recently learned just how inexpensive it is to get a personal size small x-mas tree farm started. Frazier fir transplants run about a $1 each. You can easily plant 250 trees on one acre and leave space for roads between every 3rd or 4th row for the tractor. Push a shovel into the ground, rock it back and forth to make a V. Put the 15-18" tree into the V and tamp the V closed with your foot. Repeat 249 more times. Keep them watered and the real work begins in 3-4 years when you have to start shaping them. I may be off base, but it seems as though an initial $250 investment would yield more trees than you or your friends and family could ever use. 6-9 years later everyone can have a huge tree at no cost. Of course to keep the sizes flowing, you would want to plant another 50 every year to insure a steady supply down the road. Assuming crop loss due to numerous reasons, a start with 250 seems fair. Trees don't need flat or tilled land.
Perfect rows are not important. The rows can follow the land you have. What do you guys think?