Connecticut news

Orchard Takes Root in Middletown

by Jane Harris

Phase One of the collaboration between Middletown Connecticut's Urban Forestry Commission, Water & Sewer Department, AIC, Middletown Garden Club and the CT Chapter of The American Chestnut Foundation (CT-TACF) is off to a roaring start!

The new Middletown orchard is in its test stage: the twenty American chestnuts planted May 30th will be carefully watched to make sure that this is a viable site for the future plantings of hybrid and back-crossed American chestnuts.

Middletown Chestnut Planting team

Kathie Green, Jane Harris, Dick Carella and Elaine Carella (from left to right) beam at the happy conclusion of their first-ever American chestnut planting! Photo courtesy of Jennifer Allcock. [click on photo to see larger version]

Under the careful supervision of Jennifer Allcock, Board member of CT-TACF, three members of the Middletown Garden Club ? plus assorted willing spouses ? assembled their tools and supplies, and carefully planted the nuts sent by TACF Regional Science Coordinator Kendra Gurney.

Many hands were involved in the preparation work: James Sipperly, soil scientist for the Middletown Water and Sewer Department, made sure that the area was mowed and the normally locked gates left open. Jane Harris, an arborist and new Board member at CT-TACF, had taken soil samples to the CT Agricultural Experiment Station, then staked out the planting plan and sprayed the weedy area with herbicide. The Middletown Garden Club provided the planting supplies: peat moss, perlite, vermiculite, stakes, weed block, etc.

Ken Ahnell of The Connection, Inc. brought a work crew from the Alternative Incarceration Center to dig the foot-deep holes in the untilled soil.

Most important, other members of CT-TACF had sent supplies ? protective tubes, flags, and the all-important American chestnuts themselves!

Members of the Middletown Garden Club will monitor the need for watering until drip irrigation becomes available.

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A wild American chestnut is always a sight to see, especially one with a healed canker.

Have you found any wild American chestnuts?

#americanchestnut #nature #envrionment #blight #explore
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Quite a few around us in CT, but none that big. I assume what we are seeing are stump sprouts.

God, I hope it has developed genetic resistance and passes that on. I want to live in a world full of American Chestnuts and Elms again

At my art residency in WV there was an American chestnut tree in their yard! I cried! I collected some of the seed pods

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Every season tells a story… 🌰

Maybe it’s a chipmunk on the run, a chestnut sprouting new life, or snow dusting winter leaves. However you see it, we want you to capture it. The 2026 American Chestnut Photo Contest is open!

📸 Submit up to 5 photos
🏆 Chance to win TACF gear + a feature in Chestnut magazine + Seed Level membership
🗓️ Entries due December 31, 2026

Your next hike could lead to the winning shot.

Submit photos to: gro.fcat@snoitacinummoc

Visit the following link for more information: tacf.org/2026-photo-contest/

#naturelovers #americanchestnut #photographycontest #exploremore #photography
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Every season tells a story… 🌰Maybe it’s a chipmunk on the run, a chestnut sprouting new life, or snow dusting winter leaves. However you see it, we want you to capture it. The 2026 American Chestnut Photo Contest is open!📸 Submit up to 5 photos🏆 Chance to win TACF gear + a feature in Chestnut magazine + Seed Level   membership🗓️ Entries due December 31, 2026Your next hike could lead to the winning shot.Submit photos to: communications@tacf.orgVisit the following link for more information: https://tacf.org/2026-photo-contest/#naturelovers #americanchestnut #photographycontest #exploremore #photographyImage attachment

Visit www.williamsondailynews.com/opinion/appalachian-bluebird-when-the-forests-were-brought-down-the-m... to explore this article on the historic logging industry, the significance of American chestnuts within it, and the methods used to transport logs from the mountains.

#americanchestnut #news #logging #history #explore
... See MoreSee Less

Visit https://www.williamsondailynews.com/opinion/appalachian-bluebird-when-the-forests-were-brought-down-the-mountain/article_2f171b21-7152-50ab-9767-4c52aff55471.html to explore this article on the historic logging industry, the significance of American chestnuts within it, and the methods used to transport logs from the mountains. #americanchestnut #news #logging #history #explore

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Raping the earth really noble 🤬

Check out this reel by the Seed Crown Company! They are testing whether Seed Crown shelters can help with direct seeding chestnuts in a forest setting.

In this video, Scott Laseter heads out to a montane longleaf restoration area on Georgia's Pine Mountain for the first tally of a direct seeding trial for American chestnuts.
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Check out this informative short video by the Georgia Chapter! It shows you how we process catkins and store pollen for chestnut breeding. ... See MoreSee Less

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