Hartinez
Masterpiece
making the piñon rain from the heavens!
Pinyon seeds are one of my favorite snacks. Growing up, I would look forward to eating them every fall at my grandparents’. As an adult, I would buy 12 pounds every year until the last few years, when the price has been really high.But I also had a great time harvesting piñon seeds for eating. It’s a big time tradition here and northern NM is seeing a very bountiful crop this year. Roasted, salted and ready to snack!
Very much my experience as well early on. The dirt conditions they are growing in is crucial and the time taken to extract an intact ball even more so. It can take anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour plus, to slowly pull away rocks and other debris and carefully sever any small roots and ultimately the feeder root. I will know so so much more next spring/summer with these trees and the process of collecting piñon!Thanks for sharing those stunning photos and yamadori information. I have tried collecting pinon over the years, mostly in the East Mountains and Manzanos, with zero success. I went out in late February and March. the soil conditions were exactly as you described; so fine that it just fell away from the roots. I collected very little of the loose soil and tried to pack it around the bare roots when I put them in pure pumice and immobilized the trunks with wire. they made it through the spring and immediately died when our summer temps kicked in. Most of the bonsai community I know here in Albuquerque don't bother with pinons, preferring to work with ponderosas and Japanese Black pines, which do surprisingly well here. I have had success collecting Bigtooth maples and New Mexico olive/privet. I have left them in the pumice for going on three years now to make sure they have a strong enough root system to survive going from a training basket into a bonsai pot.
I’m pretty sure these are just from a bark beetle that have slowly weathered and gotten bigger over time.hello, thanks for sharing those amazing pics
Was it a bear that made these holes?
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I've not heard anything around here, and they're a big issue.It's that stinkin' bark beetle that's decimating our Piñon population! Is there a large-scale solution for this epidemic?
It’s not been much of a problem of late in this area. The trees that were affected died years ago. Everything else has just been massively beaten on the west facing slope from, wind, rain, snow, etc. massive difference from those on the west slope compared to the north slope trees that are mostly straight as an arrow.It's that stinkin' bark beetle that's decimating our Piñon population! Is there a large-scale solution for this epidemic?
Thanks Dabbler. I’m nervously excited. While I’ve had great success with lesser trees, I really don’t want to lose any of these. Percentages tell me a few won’t make it, but I have felt good about what I’ve dug so far!Wow those are some crazy tree's! Good luck and congrats
Dayum Rudd. In Abq. We’re are mid to high 80s and 50s at night. In the area these come from. It’s a few degrees cooler.Looks like you found some good ones! What’s the weather like out there? Its still about 100 out here, way too hot for collecting.
The tree I dug Monday had the smallest tapLooks like you found some good ones! What’s the weather like out there? Its still about 100 out here, way too hot for collecting.
Nothing fancy. Just keeping the foliage misted, and pumice moist. Keeping the tree perfectly still for hard winds by securing to the boxes is also keycan I ask you what your after care is like?