QA

Question: How To Grow Pecan Trees From Nuts

How long does it take for a pecan nut to sprout?

Germination is staggered for each individual seedling and 4 to 8 weeks is required for all seed to come up. Dry Storage is required for the nuts as soon as they are harvested. Kernel percent moisture needs to be reduced from 20 at harvest to 6, 5, or 4 before going into storage.

How do you sprout pecan trees from pecans?

Grafting is a process where you take a cutting from a cultivar pecan tree and allow it to grow on the rootstock tree, essentially blending two trees into one. The part of the tree with the roots in the ground is the one you grew from seed, the branches that produce nuts are from a particular cultivar pecan tree.

How long does it take a pecan tree to grow from a pecan?

Trees will begin producing a few nuts three to four years after planting. Significant production can be achieved in six to eight years. Good production will begin the ninth or tenth year. Trees can be productive for a 100 years or longer.

Can you grow a pecan tree from a branch?

Pecan trees can easily be grown from cuttings. Take cuttings ¼” in diameter in late spring when the tree has broken dormancy. Remove leaves from the bottom half of each cutting, dip the end in rooting hormone, and place it in a tray of moist perlite.

Do you have to have 2 pecan trees to produce?

For pecan trees to bare nuts you will need two or more different cultivars, as they require cross pollination for maximum productivity. Pecan trees do not bear fruit until they are between the ages of four and 12 years old and that is determined by the cultivar.

Can you start a pecan tree from a nut?

A viable pecan seed (the nut) is the product of cross pollination (sexual reproduction) between two pecan trees. Of course, you CAN grow a pecan tree from pecan nut. That’s how commercial growers get their rootstocks, and it’s also how new and different pecan varieties are discovered.

Will a volunteer pecan tree produce nuts?

Plants that have been grafted will not breed true through the seeds they produce. In our experience, squirrels would get pecans from pecan trees down the street, industriously hide them in our flower garden, and promptly forget where they put them.

Where do pecan trees grow best?

Pecans grow best in warm, humid climates. In cool climate pecans may not produce nuts, and may suffer from coral spot.

How fast do pecan trees grow?

This tree grows at a medium rate, with height increases of 13–24″ per year.

How do you root a pecan tree cutting?

Remove the leaves from the bottom half of each cutting. Dip the cut end in rooting hormone, then press the stem into the perlite. About half its length should be below the surface. Add a little more water, then place the pot outside in a sheltered area with some shade.

What is the fastest growing pecan tree?

The Pawnee Pecan (Carya illinoinensis ‘Pawnee’) has recently become one of the more popular pecan producing trees around. It tends to produce nuts much more rapidly than other species of pecan trees do.

What are the health benefits of eating pecans?

Pecans are a good source of calcium, magnesium, and potassium, which help lower blood pressure. Most of the fat found in pecans is a healthy type called monounsaturated fat. Eating foods with monounsaturated fat instead of foods high in saturated fats (like potato chips) can help lower levels of bad LDL cholesterol.

Do pecan trees produce nuts every year?

Alternate bearing in pecan production means that a tree bears a relatively heavy crop of nuts one year and a lighter one the next. It is characteristic of pecan trees and other hardwood forest trees. Healthy trees of any cultivar are better able to bear pecans consistently from year to year.

Are pecan trees hard to grow?

Pecans require at least 3 feet of well-drained soil, so rocky areas with thin soil don’t work. These trees are best able to take up critical nutrients from soil that has a pH level of 6-7. Pecans must be cross-pollinated (usually by the wind) to reproduce well.

Are pecan trees fast growers?

Pecan tree growth rate is very fast. Some trees can gain up to 3-5 feet per year.

Do pecans have to be grafted?

Pecans grown from seed are not true to type. This means that a nut produced by a given variety will not, when planted, produce a tree identical to the parent. Therefore, in order to propagate a tree of a given variety, buds or shoots from the parent tree must be grafted onto a seedling rootstock.

Are pecan trees grafted?

Pecan trees are clonally propagated by some form of grafting or budding using scion wood or bud wood taken from a tree of the cultivar that will be propagated. Because they are clonally produced, trees grown by grafting will produce nuts that are identical to the source of the graft wood.

How can you tell if a pecan tree is male or female?

1. Pecan trees are monoecious. This means that they produce separate male and female flowers on the same plant. Male flowers are located on 4-5 inch long catkins, while female flowers are small, yellowish-green, and grow on spikes at the tips of shoots.

How do you keep squirrels out of pecan trees?

Place moth balls containing naphthalene in mesh bags, and tie them in the branches of your pecan trees to keep squirrels away . Try using electronic repellents made for garden pests, but be sure to monitor the batteries frequently.

How do I know what kind of pecan tree I have?

The difference in each pecan variety comes down to two main distinctions: the size of the nut and the thickness of the shell. Most native or “wild” pecans have been known to have thicker shells and smaller nuts than improved varieties.