Connecticut news

TACF Hires New England Regional Science Coordinator

I'm extremely pleased to welcome Leila Pinchot to the staff of The American Chestnut Foundation. Leila is a graduate student at the Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry at Yale University, and while continuing her studies, has agreed to concurrently perform the function of New England Regional Science Coordinator for TACF. While she'll be working with State Chapters throughout New England, Connecticut will be her home. I asked Leila to forward a biography and this is what she sent.

I have always enjoyed being outside in nature. As a little girl I spent summers in eastern Pennsylvania, where my sister and I would camp, fish and hunt for edible plants. In high school my father told my sister and I about the American chestnut and the blight and showed us some sprouts growing in PA. As many people are, I was drawn to the chestnut story. Over winter break of my senior year at Oberlin College, I volunteered for Dr. Sandra Anagnostakis at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station. The month long internship turned into a summer job, where I learned how to grow, pollinate, and inoculate chestnuts, and to grow chestnut blight and to convert blight fungus with hypovirulence. After working for Dr. Anagnostakis, I helped established an American chestnut orchard at the Milford Experimental Forest in PA. I am currently a student at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. I am very excited to join the American Chestnut Foundation as the New England regional Science Coordinator. Feel free to contact me at gro.fca@alieL.

Leila Pinchot – New England Region Science Coordinator

Leila Pinchot dressed for work

[click on photo to enlarge](photographer unknown)

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🍂 As autumn arrives, chestnut trees at TACF’s Meadowview Research Farms enter dormancy, leaves turning gold and brown before falling. This cozy pause is nature’s renewal, while staff use the time to plan, prepare, and continually refine methods across the field, nursery, and lab. Dormancy sets the stage for a strong spring and a year of progress in chestnut science. 🌳

#fall #chestnuts #americanchestnutfoundation #americanchestnut
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I have two American chestnut trees in my yard in Delaware. The one is leaning bad and needs to be cut down. I would someone to contact me for you guys can get seeds and limbs

Chestnut shortbread, anyone? In the latest issue of Chestnut magazine, staff member Angus shares his recipe for shortbread topped with black walnut spread. Watch the full recipe video on YouTube and see it in print in our members-only magazine!

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTW0m0R8UF4&feature=youtu.be
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These beautiful backcross seedlings from TACF's Meadowview Research Farms are hanging out in our Asheville office looking pretty in the sunlight. ... See MoreSee Less

These beautiful backcross seedlings from TACFs Meadowview Research Farms are hanging out in our Asheville office looking pretty in the sunlight.Image attachmentImage attachment+1Image attachment

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Love the trees

Looking pretty…pretty Chinese. 😞

I sent a membership in and have heard nothing back, did you steal my money?

Chestnut season may be winding down, but the thrill of finding these hidden treasures never gets old. ... See MoreSee Less

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Will Chestnut trees grow in the North?

I have several chestnut trees on my farm and they produce every year. I know the wildlife loves them. 

Wish mine would start producing

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🎃 From all of us at Meadowview Research Farms, have a spook-tacular Halloween! May your night be free of blight and all things weevil (not evil!)—and full of chestnut cheer. 🌰👻 We’re brewing up serious science in our cauldrons to bring the American chestnut back from the dead—no tricks, just treats for the next forest! 🌳🧪 #HappyHalloween #ChestnutRestoration ... See MoreSee Less

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