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Sweet chestnut tree
Can anyone tell me if sweet chestnut trees are normally grafted? I
didn't think they were, but I don't know much about them. I bought a sweet chestnut tree from a nursery in Calvados a few years ago. It had three main stems. It's now growing like a bush, putting out new, and very strong, shoots from the bottom. The old stems produce flowers and rather pathetic fruit. There is the brown shell but nothing has developed in it. It's done this for the past three years. The new stems are now stronger than the original three and are about seven or eight foot tall but they don't show any signs of having flowers. Are they suckers? They don't look any different to the original stems (as you would get with a rose). Or will they take more time to start producing? Or are they taking all the strength from the original stems so that they don't grow viable fruit? To be honest, I wasn't expecting it to grow like a bush. But then the only sweet chestnuts I've seen are down in the south-west of France and they grow as I would expect - a very tall tree, something like a horse-chestnut. David -- David Rance writing from Le Mesnil Villement, Calvados, France |
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