April 05, 2012

2010 & 11... Almost caught up!

As mentioned at the end of the last post we started off the willow plantation.
I purchased and collected the willows from Yorkshire Willow...
they came as 10" cuttings... well, lengths...
of one year old stem with about six to ten buds.


The willow sticks in their nursery bed...
some were too young to leave home!!

The idea is to plant each length of willow stem where it is going to finally be...
in our meadow?
You are joking!!...
it was difficult enough to find them the way I planted these ones.

The willows were of seventeen different varieties in bundles of ten.
One hundred and seventy twigs...
what we bought are listed below [the ones introduced as 20cm cuttings]...
and should be buried with around two inches/two buds above ground.
So I decided to create two nursery areas...
the one pictured above and another one in a damp spot out in the meadow.

On each row I used a Crack Willow stick to hold the label on the left in the photo above...
this year I will plant out the twenty-odd young Crack willow volunteers that were the result...
they will form a coppice area towards the riverbank.


These are the Sekka catkins...
grey against the red bark.
The majority of the bought 'twigs' took hold in the pictured nursery area...
but the success rate was poor in the meadow.
That wasn't surprising...
I purchased them in late March and planted them in early April...
not really the right time...
and as we were still in the UK for much of 2010...
they weren't able to be regularly watered either.


These are the wonderful Cohu Blue catkins...
they start steel blue-grey, then "heat-up" and, finally...
catch fire.

These young trees were then planted out in blocks...
or patches where there were only two or three survivors...
last year...
the year of the very hot, dry summer....
again not at all good for young trees that haven't got roots down deep.
If you look at the tree list page, you will see a column marked survivors 2012...
I will be going round next week trimming the survivors down to two or three buds on each shoot...
[and planting the cuttings deep, in situ, to extend the blocks/patches].


Tree Table of those species on site

English Name Species French name [if any] Survivors [2011] Uses Comments
Crack Willow Salix fragilis Saule fragile N/A Coppice for biomass On site
White Welsh Salix fragilis decipiens 1 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
White Willow Salix alba Saule blanc (3) ex 10 Coppice for rods and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Scarlet Willow Salix alba 'Chermesina' 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from cuttings
Flanders Red Salix alba fragilis 3 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Golden Willow Salix alba vitellina Osier doré 5 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Dog Willow or Sage-leaf Willow Salix candida 6 ex 10 Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Tora Salix viminalis tora 5 ex 10 Coppice for rods and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Continental Purple Salix daphniodes Saule faux-daphné 10 ex 10 Coppice for rods, colour and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Black Willow Salix nigricians 2 ex 10 Coppice for rods and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Bay Willow Salix pentandra Saule a cinq étamines 9 ex 10 Coppice for rods and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Purple Osier Salix purpurea Osier rouge 5 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Cohu Blue Salix purpurea 8 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Green Dicks Salix purpurea 3 ex 10 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Sekka Salix sachalinensis 9 ex 10 Coppice for rods and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Black Maul Salix triandra 11 ex 20 Coppice for colour Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Common Osier Salix viminalis 5 ex 10 Coppice for rods, colour and biomass Introduced from 20cm cuttings
Grey Willow Salix cinerea Saule cendré 1 On site
Eared Sallow Salix aurita Saule à oreillettes 1 Self seeded at allotment
Pussy or Goat Willow Salix caprea Saule marsault 1 Plant more as early bee fodder Self-seeded - On site by bridge

No comments: