|
Chestnut Trees in Merrimack NH, Trying to Bring them back
From the Nashua Telegraph, This is a great
story and effort by volunteers from the American Chestnut Foundation. I
wish them much success.
MERRIMACK NH– Years from now, when American chestnut trees once again line local streets, one Merrimack tree might be to thank.
This particular chestnut tree, which sits
at the entrance to Merrimack’s Community Hospice House on Naticook Road,
gave birth this fall to at least 50 nuts that researchers will use in
their efforts to develop a disease-resistant strain that will help
return the chestnut population to its former glory.
The trees once made up a quarter of the
forests along the Eastern seaboard until they were virtually wiped out
by the blight during the 20th century.
Researchers and volunteers worked last week
to collect the chestnuts, and they will replant seeds from the
Merrimack nuts in the months sometime next spring hopes of producing
more resistant strains, volunteers said this week.
“Our tree did very well. Better than we
expected,” Curt Laffin, a retired ranger and a volunteer with the
American Chestnut Foundation, said Tuesday, four days after he helped to
remove the chestnuts.
“It’s a small tree, so to get better than 50 (chestnuts) is a good thing,” he said. “These could help a lot.”
The Merrimack chestnuts, like others around
the state and the country, are born from a special type of pollen,
cross-bred with Chinese chestnut trees, which are naturally resistant to
the blight.
Researchers pollinated the trees this
summer, painting the ferns with the pollen in July and then covering the
flowers with paper bags to prevent them from being fertilized.
After giving them time to mature, the
researchers returned last Wednesday to remove the chestnuts from the
tree, and they quickly transferred the nuts to the American Chestnut
Foundation research facility in Burlington, Vt., where they will spend
the winter.
Once the spring arrives and the ground
warms, researchers will plant seeds from the nuts this spring in a tree
orchard, according to Kendra Gurney, regional science coordinator for
the chestnut foundation’s New England branch.
“We’re not sure exactly where (the seeds)
will go yet. But it’ll be probably somewhere in (New Hampshire),” Gurney
said Tuesday. “We’ll probably bring them back close to home.”
In New Hampshire, 400 trees are currently
growing at a site in Peterborough, and foundation officials are
developing another test site in Hollis.
Last year, researchers extracted nearly
200 chestnuts from a tree in Hudson. They had planned to plant the seeds
this spring in a Vermont orchard, but the orchard wasn’t ready. They
planted those seeds last month.
“We’re hoping they really turn out,” said Laffin, a Hudson resident.
“It’s been a good year,” said Gurney, from
the American Chestnut Foundation. “Having two pretty solid lines from
that part of New Hampshire helps us represent that part of the state.”
Together, researchers and volunteers hope
this is just the beginning. The Merrimack tree, covered with cracks and
lesions, shows signs of giving way to the blight, but researchers are
hopeful it will yield another harvest next year.
“I’m hopeful,” Laffin said Tuesday. “It treated us very well this year. We’ll have to see what happens.”
Jake Berry can be reached at 594-6402 or jberry@nashuatelegraph.com.
Of course if you are looking to buy or sell Merrimack NH homes , call the Merrimack NH real estate experts today.
|