US (IA): State forest nursery will start taking tree and shrub orders soon

The Iowa DNR’s State Forest Nursery in Ames will open its phone lines and website for taking seedling orders — both for this fall and next spring. Nursery manager Pat Griffin says they’re preparing now to handle what will most certainly be a deluge of requests for the tiny trees and shrubs.

“Last year, we processed about 4,000 orders, give or take a little bit,” Griffin says. “We sell bare-root tree seedlings. We sell everything in bundles of 25. Our average order size is about 150 seedlings.” If you do the math, that’s about 600,000 seedlings that were sent out last season, though some years, it’s as many as a million.

The tree varieties include 23 species of native hardwoods, along with eight evergreen species and 15 smaller trees and shrubs. “We grow 45 different species of trees and shrubs, but not everything’s available in the fall,” Griffin says. “Some things we only put out in the spring, but during the fall, you can plant our hardwoods, and shrubs are available. Conifers aren’t available until spring.” Varieties include hickory, maple, and walnut, as well as red oak, river birch and black cherry, and dozens more.

While orders can be made starting September 1, the seedlings won’t start shipping out until November 1. Griffin says November is an ideal time to launch into landscaping. “We’ll keep the trees dormant so they aren’t trying to leaf out, so it is a good time to plant them,” Griffin says. “The roots will stay active underground, so the tree will still put on new root growth during that time, but the tree is not growing. It’s a great time to get the trees in the ground. They don’t have to deal with the stress of the heat.”

Read more at radioiowa.com


Publication date:



Receive the daily newsletter in your email for free | Click here


Other news in this sector:


Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.