drought tolerant trees?
- catalyst
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drought tolerant trees?
i know, not strictly vegetables!
but, we have a problem here with eucalyptus (blue gum) plantations, and i am trying to find species of trees that could be a commercial pulp crop that people could plant instead of euca. needs to be fast growing, drought resistant, able to stand minus 7 degrees in january....
anyone got any ideas?
but, we have a problem here with eucalyptus (blue gum) plantations, and i am trying to find species of trees that could be a commercial pulp crop that people could plant instead of euca. needs to be fast growing, drought resistant, able to stand minus 7 degrees in january....
anyone got any ideas?
- Millymollymandy
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- possum
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we live in an area of nz that is one of the driest and hottest and most free draining soil in nz, so if you want something to survive it has to either be watered or be completetly drought resistant.
Gum trees once they are big enough will durvive without water, some varieties better than others - the silver leafed ones and the small leafed ones, the large leafed ones will suffer in winter
wattle (related to the mimosa i believe) will also survive and does not need as much water as a gum tree when young. purple wattle is particularly attractive.
however the ultimate drought resistant tree is tree lucerne, it does not require watering even after a couple of months of no rain an temperatures in the mid thirties, even when only a very small seedling say 6 inches high. it grwos rapidly and is a god nitrogen fixer and forage tree. it only lives to 15 or 20 years. we have loads of the stuff.
Gum trees once they are big enough will durvive without water, some varieties better than others - the silver leafed ones and the small leafed ones, the large leafed ones will suffer in winter
wattle (related to the mimosa i believe) will also survive and does not need as much water as a gum tree when young. purple wattle is particularly attractive.
however the ultimate drought resistant tree is tree lucerne, it does not require watering even after a couple of months of no rain an temperatures in the mid thirties, even when only a very small seedling say 6 inches high. it grwos rapidly and is a god nitrogen fixer and forage tree. it only lives to 15 or 20 years. we have loads of the stuff.
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- catalyst
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mimosa is a fire problem here as much as the eucalyptus.
so far i have found kiri:
http://www.paulowniatrees.com.au/
which look very promising.
eucalyptus is grown to make toilet paper, or mdf and such nasties...
but any tree that would provide any economic return quickly is what i am looking for, especially if they aid other tree growth which paulownia seems to...
so far i have found kiri:
http://www.paulowniatrees.com.au/
which look very promising.
eucalyptus is grown to make toilet paper, or mdf and such nasties...
but any tree that would provide any economic return quickly is what i am looking for, especially if they aid other tree growth which paulownia seems to...
- frozenthunderbolt
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