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<blockquote data-quote="catman529" data-source="post: 4938102" data-attributes="member: 9284"><p></p></blockquote><p>not necessarily. Red oaks usually produce every year, but the crop can vary of course. They bloom and set fruit every year in the spring. There will be both mature and immature acorns on the same tree when they drop in the fall. </p><p></p><p>Here's a good link article: <a href="https://extension2.missouri.edu/g9414#production" target="_blank">https://extension2.missouri.edu/g9414#production</a></p><p></p><p><em>Each fall, trees in the red oak group will have a combination of small, immature acorns on the current year's growth and mature acorns on the previous year's growth. Thus, species in the red oak group can provide an acorn crop in years with a late spring freeze that might have destroyed the white oak acorn crop. However, in both groups, acorn production remains very unpredictable from year to year. Research has shown that, on average, most species produce a good crop of acorns only one year out of three or four.</em></p><p></p><p></p><p>Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro</p><p>[/QUOTE]</p>
[QUOTE="catman529, post: 4938102, member: 9284"] [/quote] not necessarily. Red oaks usually produce every year, but the crop can vary of course. They bloom and set fruit every year in the spring. There will be both mature and immature acorns on the same tree when they drop in the fall. Here’s a good link article: [url=https://extension2.missouri.edu/g9414#production]https://extension2.missouri.edu/g9414#production[/url] [i]Each fall, trees in the red oak group will have a combination of small, immature acorns on the current year’s growth and mature acorns on the previous year’s growth. Thus, species in the red oak group can provide an acorn crop in years with a late spring freeze that might have destroyed the white oak acorn crop. However, in both groups, acorn production remains very unpredictable from year to year. Research has shown that, on average, most species produce a good crop of acorns only one year out of three or four.[/i] Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro [/QUOTE]
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