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Starting a Tree Nursery: What you Need to Know

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Starting a Tree Nursery: What you Need to Know

  1. 1. Richard Hodges, ReTreeUS Program Manager
  2. 2. ReTreeUS is dedicated to promoting an environmentally sustainable, socially just food system through education, practical resources, and mentorship. We plant orchards in schools and provide educational programs that empower people to be healthy environmental stewards.
  3. 3. • Educational orchards in public schools • Partnership orchards with other nonprofits • School garden support
  4. 4. 80 Educational Orchards!
  5. 5. Programming • Orchard Caretakers • Pruning workshops • Grafting Workshops • Maintenance and orchard development • Curricular support • Educational signage • Orchard Mapping and analyzing
  6. 6. Benefits of School Orchards: • Learning opportunities! • Experiential learning • Outdoor classroom • Fresh fruit! • Inspiration • New opportunities • Stewardship • Connectivity • Career paths • Beautification
  7. 7. Potential Challenges: • Pests! • Lack of investment • Lack of time… • Lack of experience caring for fruit trees
  8. 8. -Examples from Orchard Caretaker Newsletters-
  9. 9. -Resources for Orchard Caretakers-
  10. 10. Considerations for planting a new orchard • Sun (Fruit trees need full sun in order to produce good fruit) • Soil • (dig a pilot hole, is it all rocks and fill?) • Soil tests are available at University Extension offices, they provide great learning opportunities • Does your site have good drainage? If you dig a hole and water collects in the bottom that is no good • Water (Is there access to a hose?) Young fruit trees require consistent watering and it needs to be easy for whoever is responsible for watering.
  11. 11. Bare-root vs. potted trees Learn More about how to plant trees: https://www.arborday.org/trees/planting/ Bare-Root challenges • Must be kept dormant until planting • Tend to start smaller (but oftentimes will catch up) • Requires diligent watering first years and precise planting Bare-root benefits • Less expensive • Not root bound • Easy to transport Potted tree benefits • Tend to be larger at time of planting • More flexible planting window • The soil established roots in the soil provide a buffer • Ideal for fall planting Potted tree challenges • More expensive • Can be root bound • Leaves may have been sprayed with pesticides, may contain pests and/or disease
  12. 12. School Orchards = Outdoor Classrooms retreeus.org agclassroom.org

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