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Sawtooth Acorns
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<blockquote data-quote="Popcorn" data-source="post: 5005145" data-attributes="member: 20151"><p>place them in a plastic bag with a moist paper towel or two and refrigerate or store in crawl space. If they get too wet or freeze solid they will be damaged. If storing them dry then place in a damp area like a crawl space and protect them from rodents and light. To be a healthy tree they need a few hundred hours of cold storage. Pot them in Feb or march and they will respond quickly. Start in one gallon pots filled with mulch and soil. Plant them shallow as they will root as they want to root deep, in nature most acorns are planted by falling into leaves or stuck 1 inch down by a squirrel. The first couple years they develop roots and grow little so this can take a while. keep them watered, I have several white oak seedlings that will be 3 this spring that I plan to plant this winter.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Popcorn, post: 5005145, member: 20151"] place them in a plastic bag with a moist paper towel or two and refrigerate or store in crawl space. If they get too wet or freeze solid they will be damaged. If storing them dry then place in a damp area like a crawl space and protect them from rodents and light. To be a healthy tree they need a few hundred hours of cold storage. Pot them in Feb or march and they will respond quickly. Start in one gallon pots filled with mulch and soil. Plant them shallow as they will root as they want to root deep, in nature most acorns are planted by falling into leaves or stuck 1 inch down by a squirrel. The first couple years they develop roots and grow little so this can take a while. keep them watered, I have several white oak seedlings that will be 3 this spring that I plan to plant this winter. [/QUOTE]
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