It's
been a pretty good year here in the Central Valley and Sierra Nevada foothills of Northern California for acorn-producing oak trees. Acorns falling from
the oaks are more numerous than in recent years. This fall is a great
opportunity for gardeners with room for big trees to grab a bucket and
start gathering acorns, and start planting. Yes, You Can Grow That!
A word of warning: gather acorns only from oaks that are growing in your general vicinity; those are the ones most likely to succeed in your local climate and soil.
A word of warning: gather acorns only from oaks that are growing in your general vicinity; those are the ones most likely to succeed in your local climate and soil.
Acorns
can be collected from the ground or harvested from oak trees, by
shaking a branch with a pole. Generally, the healthiest acorns are those
that are picked from trees.
Take
the caps off the acorns and put the acorns in a bucket of water
overnight. Keep only those that sink to the bottom. The floaters are
probably damaged by insects or squirrels.
At
this point you can either plant the acorns directly into their
permanent garden home, into one gallon or larger containers in a
planting mix or store them for up to six months in a cool, dry place,
wrapped in a bag with peat moss. A refrigerator is ideal.
Planting
acorns directly into the yard now is best. Oaks quickly develop long
tap roots; if allowed to remain too long in a container, the roots will
quickly grow out the bottom of the pot. At transplanting time, these
seedlings may die off if the roots are cut off. If you're starting oaks
in containers, transplant them as soon as you see the first fully
developed set of leaves.
All
oaks like full sun; choose a planting area that also has good drainage.
If planting acorns in the ground, loosen a wide area a few inches deep.
Then plant the acorn either with the tip pointed down or sideways,
about an inch deep.
If
planted now, normal fall and winter rains may be all the water that
acorn seedling needs to get off to a good start. Water the new tree
deeply but sparingly during the dry season, perhaps once every two
weeks.
For more information about growing oaks from acorns, check out this University of California webpage, "How to Grow California Oaks"