Muse
Lifer
I have but it's been 40+ years, maybe 50 or more since I've seen the BIG BOYS (Sequoias) in person. I went to Muir Woods around 4 years ago, but AFAIK no Sequoias there.I've never seen them in person. I need to fix that.
I have but it's been 40+ years, maybe 50 or more since I've seen the BIG BOYS (Sequoias) in person. I went to Muir Woods around 4 years ago, but AFAIK no Sequoias there.I've never seen them in person. I need to fix that.
They grow in big circular groups, presumably around a mother tree that is now long gone, really cool.I've never seen them in person. I need to fix that.





Wasn't there someone here that owns a nursery business?I'm just guessing here(maybe @bbhaag could give better tips), but I'd start with something like a garage. Not full climate control, but not out in the weather either. Do that for a week or two, then move them to something like a covered porch. After a couple weeks of that, move them to an exposed location, particularly allowing them to be moved and bent by the wind to get them toughened up. That's my notion anyway. I could very well be wrong.
Wasn't there someone here that owns a nursery business?
That sounds in line with what I've been reading as well, I'm curious about them drying out more outdoors though, given the fighting I went through to keep these things moist enough indoors. Esp in the winter, it's been a hard slog until I figure out the plastic cap trick. I'll take a few out at a time so as not to shock them too bad, and I've got a few places I can provide dappled sun for a few hours at given points of the day. Still gotta wait for the weather to turn upwards some though, we're getting snow right now. I appreciate the info!Heh...while I appreciate the mention I can honestly say my knowledge of trees is very little especially when it comes to the cultivation of Sequoias. Don't get me wrong I've been following this thread from the beginning and have mad respect for [DHT]Osiris abilities but my focus is on annuals, perennials, and shrubs. I own a greenhouse not a tree farm those are two completely different things.
Anyway, I can just give some general advice that I give my customers from my own experiences over the years. For outdoor acclimation you want the temps to be above 40-45*F during the day. If the temps drop below 40-45 at night bring them inside otherwise you can leave them out overnight. Set them outside in a morning sun location make sure they don't get the afternoon sun. The reason is the afternoon sun is to intense and those cute little trees will get sunburn. Yes plants can get sunburn.
Wind burn is another issue to watch out for. If the winds in your area get above 15-20 mph bring them inside. High winds will dry them out and strip those needles off in no time.
Also, if you have curios critters in your area be mindful that they might come to investigate especially if you leave them out over night. Cats, chipmunks, skunks, racoons ect. can destroy months of hard work in less than 15 minutes.
Keep an eye on the watering. Being outside will dry them out faster than indoors. Transpiration due to wind and sunlight will be dramatically different than indoors and their roots will uptake water more frequently. Last but not least DON"T be surprised if they go through a little shock. This can be anything from sun wilt even though the soil is moist, browning/spotting of some needles, and a host of other things. Remember you are taking them from this carefully controlled environment were you have been babying them and putting them in the real world. Some stress is going to happen just don't freak out and do something rash. You WANT to toughen them up so when the weather in your area finally breaks they are ready to be transplanted.
You definitely have to keep the seedlings in moist air, hence the plastic up lids which they seem to be happy with. Outdoors they should be much more reasonable, I'm in the finger lakes region so we've got pretty moist air most of the time.IIRC this type of tree wants water from a misting system, not just the ground.



More inspiration for you:
View attachment 41502
This sequoia was planted in the 1930s by the CCC on a mountain top in Arizona, more than five hundred miles from its home range. It is ~3 feet DBH.
Haha bro that is awesome. I love that last pic. It's awesome because it is so over the top but at the same time it shows the passion, hard work, and love that you have poured into these trees. Good job man I love following this thread and seeing the progress you have made. It's really cool.So turns out hardening off was work effort I didn't need to make. Took a dozen of them, did the whole 'N+1 hours' for a few days, kept them out at 5h for a week or so, then on a whim decided to test with another that was smaller, just in case it croaked... turns out I could have left all of them out at once.
View attachment 43119
25 trees, all healthy and happy in the sun... Elevated on a deck to get them away from curious groundhogs.
View attachment 43120
Took the largest, dropped him in a nice, gradual sloping area of the front yard, flipped the dirt around him, threw some fabric over the top, added a little tree bark to give him a chance to outgrow the surrounding grass.
View attachment 43122
And finally a moderate structure to give a (hopefully not) vain attempt at keeping deer off it until they can't eat it entirely. Bricks are there until I can find my stupid ground staples which seem to have misplaced themselves. I figure if he can make it to next winter, he should be a foot or two tall at that point and out of the woods (hah) for being consumed by wildlife. Beyond that, it's just not dying to -30 winds until he's got thick enough bark that it won't matter.
One down, 24 more to go.
Thanks 😛 and yeah I'm pretty desperate to keep these things from being eaten. It's the best I can do to keep the wildlife out, short of setting up a tent and a campfire out there for the next year or two.Haha bro that is awesome. I love that last pic. It's awesome because it is so over the top but at the same time it shows the passion, hard work, and love that you have poured into these trees. Good job man I love following this thread and seeing the progress you have made. It's really cool.
Thanks 😛 and yeah I'm pretty desperate to keep these things from being eaten. It's the best I can do to keep the wildlife out, short of setting up a tent and a campfire out there for the next year or two.



