jersey
Full Member
- Jun 28, 2018
- 185
- 498
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
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Do the walnut companies not buy them? Around here that's a thing in the fall, the walnut companies set up hulling stations and you can bring in your walnuts to sell them. When I was a kid, I used to make a small fortune every year off the walnuts. (Of course, to me in those days, anything over ten bucks was a fortune.)No one wants them here except the squirrels.
We have no walnut buyers or hulling stations. I wish we did.👍🏼Do the walnut companies not buy them? Around here that's a thing in the fall, the walnut companies set up hulling stations and you can bring in your walnuts to sell them. When I was a kid, I used to make a small fortune every year off the walnuts. (Of course, to me in those days, anything over ten bucks was a fortune.)
😀 the eye marks look like they've been drawn on don't they. Amazing.
beautiful wood. I was told walnut root is excellent for carving.Black walnut trees are very common in my area. I’ve cut and milled them for almost 40 yrs to make gunstocks. This is a stock I’m working on now. It was from a large crotch and was cut in 2017. No stain, just a little water to show the actual color.View attachment 2170738View attachment 2170739
I’ve processed two walnut stumps. It’s a lot of work cutting back roots with petrified mud stuck to them. I’ve never carved any stump wood but here is what it looks like.beautiful wood. I was told walnut root is excellent for carving.
Also soak the black walnut husk in water.When my grandpa was young he said they would gather a bunch of those green walnuts, put them in a gunny sack, tie a rope to it and drag it behind their horses for a mile or two down to the creek. This would rough up the hulls. When they got to the creek, they would find a still pool, toss the sack in, and some chemical in the hulls would stun the fish and cause them to float up, and they would gather them up. (Probably illegal these days, but that really does work like he said.)
That's why you can't plant much of anything near a black walnut and expect it to grow."Black walnuts produce a chemical called juglone, which occurs naturally in all parts of the tree, especially in the buds, nut hulls, and roots. The leaves and stems contain smaller quantities of juglone, which is leached into the soil after they fall."
That is good to know. Good companion planting. Berries in the summer, nuts in the fall.I have a dozen young walnuts I planted from seeds. I disced up some ground and tossed a bunch of walnuts out there. Quite a few grew. Luckily, blackberries are growing up around them, protecting them from buck deer rubbing and destroying them. Evidently blackberries are not effected by the juglone.