[Ag-eq] Honey locusts

Jewel jewelblanch at kinect.co.nz
Mon Aug 27 06:03:05 UTC 2018


Tracy!  I had been thinking  along those lines too, but, though that measure of separation might be 
ideal for the trees:  if I stick around long enough to see them in their full maturity, they will 
just have to accept that their branches are going to get entangled.

The two replies that I have had from goatsplus, both were very negative;  one correspondent said 
that, in Texas, the thorned variety: I am getting  the thornless:  are   regarded as trash trees as 
the dropped thorns can cripple a car, so if they can do that, what damage would they inflict on an 
unprotected human?  considerable would be my guess, so they are grubbed out wherever they are found, 
and the other said that they grow like weeds and are very invasive.
I hope that she is correct on them growing "like weeds" because weeds grow very well on 
TheBlanchRanch, and as to their tendency to invade:  well, in New Zealand they don't, for if they 
did, they would be easy to obtain, which they are not!

         Jewel

--------------------------------------------------
From: "Tracy
 Carcione via Ag-eq" <ag-eq at nfbnet.org>

Sent: Monday, August 27, 2018 2:41 AM
To: "'Agricultural and Equestrean Division List'" <ag-eq at nfbnet.org>
Cc: "Tracy Carcione" <carcione at access.net>
Subject: Re: [Ag-eq] Honey locusts

Hi Jewel.
I think what you need to know is the spread.  Then you'd know how far apart
to put them.  So, if the spread is 22 meters, which it might or not be, and
you put them 22 meters apart, I'd think, when they're full-grown, they'd
just be touching each other at the ends of their branches.  In theory.
You're so lucky.  I'd love to have some big trees, but I don't have enough
space.
Tracy


-----Original Message-----
From: Ag-eq [mailto:ag-eq-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Jewel via Ag-eq
Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2018 3:06 AM
To: Agricultural and Equestrean Division List; GoatsPlus at yahoogroups.com
Cc: Jewel
Subject: [Ag-eq] Honey locusts

This is a variety of tree that I have been anxious to grow for many years,
but until a week ago, I
hadn't been able to find a nursery that had them. but now I have and am
getting 4 seedlings.
However, unless I am fortunate enough to set up a new record for longevity,
it is unlikely, though
not impossible, that I will see them through to their maturity.
I have very bad luck at persuading vegetables to frow for me, but, to date,
the majority of trees
that I have planted have done very well.
I see, from the web, that honey locusts grow to a height of 20m: 66 feet or
thereabouts.  I don't
want to plant them, unnecessarily, far apart nor do I wish to overcrowd
them, so if any of you have
had H L, what did you find was the optimum separation?

           Jewel






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