Virginia News

Restoring Virginia’s Chestnuts West of the Blue Ridge

What: Restoring Virginia’s Chestnuts West of the Blue Ridge

When: Saturday, June 7, 2014, from 2 pm to 5 pm

Where: Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia
1290 Richmond Avenue, Staunton, VA

The public is invited to an informational meeting June 7th in Staunton hosted by the Virginia Chapter of The American Chestnut Foundation (TACF). Anyone interested in learning about restoration of the American chestnut is encouraged to attend. The meeting will start at 2:00 p.m. in the Dairy Barn meeting room of the Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia. This is a first step in establishing an active local American chestnut restoration effort.

Participants will learn about the Virginia Chapter’s progress with backcross breeding work to develop blight resistant American chestnut adapted to Virginia’s soils and climate. There will be a demonstration of the controlled pollination process and an exploration of possible future steps to establish a Restoration Branch of the Virginia Chapter to advance this work in areas within driving distance of Staunton.

A key step in the effort to breed locally adapted American chestnut trees is identification of local survivors. Meeting participants will learn how to distinguish American chestnut from other trees and report potential mother trees to advance the work of chestnut restoration. Weather permitting, it may be possible to visit one of the surviving American chestnut trees growing in the area.

Once the mighty giants of the eastern forest, American chestnuts stood up to 100 feet tall, and numbered in the billions. Virginia’s mountains were the in the heart of the American chestnut range. From Maine to Georgia, the chestnut was a vital part of the eastern forest, provided abundant food for wildlife, and was an essential component of the economy. In the beginning of the 20th century the fungal pathogen responsible for chestnut blight, accidentally imported from Asia, spread rapidly through the eastern forests and by 1950 the fungus had eliminated the chestnut as a mature forest tree.

In 1983, a dedicated group of scientists and laypersons formed The American Chestnut Foundation and began a special breeding process, which in 2005 produced the first potentially blight-resistant trees called Restoration Chestnuts 1.0. Now assisted by more than 5,000 members and volunteers in 23 states, the organization is undertaking the planting of Restoration Chestnuts 1.0 in select locations throughout the eastern US.

The Virginia Chapter of TACF advances the work of the American Chestnut Foundation in the Commonwealth of Virginia. TACF is a 501 (c) 3 conservation organization headquartered in Asheville, NC. For more information on TACF and their work to restore the American chestnut tree, contact TACF Director of Communications Mila Kirkland at (828) 281-0047, email: gro.fca@alim, or visit www.tacf.org.

For more information, contact Kathy Marmet moc.liamg@temramyhtak.

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Check out this interview by World Teen where ME Chapter Vice President, Eva Butler, and our Director of Science Implementation, Cassie Stark, discuss the American chestnut and the role recurrent genomic selection has in saving it.

Watch the full video here: teen.gwnews.com/articles/genetic-research-may-save-the-american-chestnut

#americanchestnut #news #conservation #Restoration #explorepage
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And as you continue to study these trees you come to realize that some of these sprouts do live long enough to produce nuts. Then you realize that even in their native range there are a few trees that have survived with blight for many many decades and grow quite large. Then you come to learn that there are in fact many large trees that have been living with blight for many years and continue to grow and produce nuts. I’m sure this group will eventually crack this nut.

Would be nice if more people learn those facts. There is a lot of propaganda out there that tries to mute and downplay what you have discovered. Lately it looks like this group has cracked the nut with the RGS approach and "Best of Best" breeding concepts.

May Events! Field season is starting, so get out and help plant some chestnuts!

Visit the following link to register for an event: tacf.org/events/category/tacf/

#americanchestnut #events #VA #WV #conservation #Restoration #explorepage
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May Events! Field season is starting, so get out and help plant some chestnuts! Visit the following link to register for an event: https://tacf.org/events/category/tacf/ #americanchestnut #events #VA #WV #conservation #restoration #explorepageImage attachmentImage attachment

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Can they grow in Florida?

The VA Chapter collaborated on an orchard culling project at Matthews State Forest with Grayson Land Care! ... See MoreSee Less

The VA Chapter collaborated on an orchard culling project at Matthews State Forest with Grayson Land Care!Image attachmentImage attachment+1Image attachment

Read this article in Preservation Magazine to learn how a historic shelter made of American chestnut logs was moved across state lines.

Article by Alison Van Houten and image by David Huff.

Click the following link to read the article: savingplaces.org/stories/appalachian-trail-shelter-is-saved

#news #americanchestnut #historic #explorepage #conservation
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Read this article in Preservation Magazine to learn how a historic shelter made of American chestnut logs was moved across state lines.Article by Alison Van Houten and image by David Huff.Click the following link to read the article: https://savingplaces.org/stories/appalachian-trail-shelter-is-saved #news #americanchestnut #historic #explorepage #conservation

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That picture is at it's new location in Hot Springs, NC, it's on display there

Love seeing what the Chapters are up to! ... See MoreSee Less

Love seeing what the Chapters are up to!Image attachmentImage attachment+2Image attachment

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I have two massive chestnut trees in my backyard and I’ve tried to get someone to look at them to see what kind they are. Who can I contact?

Thank you to our long time Partner, Army Corps of Engineers, Green River Lake. * * * You all do much to educate and serve the thousands of Visitors who enjoy Green River Lake in Central Kentucky. Ken Darnell, KY TACF Chapter President

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