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2025 CT-TACF Planting Season has Begun

2025 CT-TACF Planting Season has Begun

Below is the current schedule for our spring plantings where we could use volunteer help.  Dates and times are tentative and may be rescheduled due to weather or other unforeseeable circumstances.  Check our website News Feed, https://tacf.org/ct/connecticut-news/, for the most up to date listing.  We are also utilizing a new volunteer activity website to track volunteer hours and obtain photo consent and waivers.  If you are interested in volunteering, please sign up for each event at https://theamericanchestnutfoundation.volunteerlocal.com/volunteer/# under the CT Chapter listing (Click on the “Sign Up Now” button).

5/20, 1:00 PM, Kern Park Bristol – A demonstration planting of up to 6 nuts or seedlings originating from wild American chestnut trees found within the city of Bristol.  Meet at Kern Park behind the Ivy School, 160 Ivy Drive, Bristol

5/23, 9:00 AM Bush Hill Preserve Manchester – Additional Plot being added to the Bush Hill Chestnut Orchard, 330 Bush Hill Rd. Manchester.  Drive down the driveway to the large garage area and you will see the chestnut orchard.

5/30, 9:00 AM Litchfield Hills Audubon Wigwam Brook Preserve Orchard
We will be adding wild American chestnut trees to the current selected Backcross orchard for germplasm conservation.  Meet at the parking area on Lipeka Rd., Litchfield

6/1, 1:00 PM McKeon Farm Ridgefield – Tentative, pending Town Board Approval for the orchard. Parking area on Old Stagecoach Rd.

RESCHEDULED TO: SATURDAY, 6/7, 1:00 PM – Wilton Land Trust GCO.  183 Ridgefield Rd, Wilton – We will be adding 2 more plots to the Chestnut Meadows GCO

 

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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: 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

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

1 CommentComment on Facebook

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

2 CommentsComment on Facebook

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

Last week, the Clemson Facilities Landscape team planted nine Allegheny chinkapin trees (Castanea pumila) at Clemson University in honor of National Arbor Day. These trees came from Chestnut Returns Farm, operated by Joe James in Seneca, South Carolina.

Joe is a longtime member of The Foundation who has worked tirelessly on Phytophthora resistance in American chestnuts and has been working with chinkapins for several years.

#chinkapin #americanchestnut #explorepage #ArborDay #conservation
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Last week, the Clemson Facilities Landscape team planted nine Allegheny chinkapin trees (Castanea pumila) at Clemson University in honor of National Arbor Day. These trees came from Chestnut Returns Farm, operated by Joe James in Seneca, South Carolina. Joe is a longtime member of The Foundation who has worked tirelessly on Phytophthora resistance in American chestnuts and has been working with chinkapins for several years. #chinkapin #americanchestnut #explorepage #arborday #conservationImage attachmentImage attachment

19 CommentsComment on Facebook

Question: How often would you expect to find surviving American Chestnut trees in the wild?

Are the Allegheny chinkapin trees (Castanea pumila) part of a group of Chestnut Trees developed to prevent the Phytophthora disease that decimated the American Chestnut trees in America?

Interesting. I live seasonally in Seneca (up north in Pennsylvania the rest of the year). My farm in Pennsylvania had a VERY large American chestnut on it that I had to harvest when it died from the blight a few years ago. I do have a house full of furniture that was made from the lumber, which I'm very thankful for, but I'd rather have the tree back. There are still a few other living American chestnuts on the property near/around my farm, but none are as big as mine was (at least not documented, I've been told about a big one that I haven't been able to see yet). I'd like to talk to Mr. James at some point and see his operation.

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