Virginia News

Pollination Plans for 2015

As a part of our breeding program for native chestnuts, we perform controlled pollination.  What we do is tie pollination bags on the female flowers of wild, surviving chestnuts.  The first step is to count out and label bags.  Then we get a bucket truck or orchard ladder and climb up into the tree.  We go back a few days later, remove the bag, dip the flower into a vial of pollen, and replace the bag.  We don’t need a lot of people to volunteer for this, but it’s kind of fun.  We go back up when the nuts are mature and cut the burs down.  Then a few days later we open the burs, which will be planted as part of the breeding program the following year.

Since the beginning of the VA Chapter’s pollination program, we have been trying to identify an indicator and the best we have found are chinquapins, which are approximately two weeks in advance of American chestnuts for both pollination and harvest.

The first five years the trees were on time to the day (Marshall target dates – Bag June 9, Pollinate June 19, Harvest September 28), but the last two years had cold wet springs and the trees were a week later and oddly, the harvest was a week earlier!  We plan on the same this year; bag June 16, pollinate June 26, harvest Sept. 21).  Note that these are target dates and not actual event dates. Also, trees in the same vicinity can vary by as much as 10 days and also tall trees can vary from the top of the tree to the bottom.  Higher altitude trees tend to be a week later (early July pollination).

Persons interested in volunteering to help with pollination should contact the VA TACF office at (540) 364-1922 or ten.nozirev@tuntsehcav.

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🌰 Harvest processing at TACF’s Meadowview Research Farms is equal parts important science and hands-on fun! Staff and volunteers shuck burs and sort chestnuts with care, ensuring quality seeds for future plantings and solid data for research. It’s a lively, rewarding way to support restoration while sharing in the joy of chestnut season together. 🌳

#AmericanChestnut #MeadowviewResearchFarms #americanchestnutfoundation#ChestnutResearch #ConservationScience #harvest
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2 CommentsComment on Facebook

This isn’t a chestnut tree, right? It’s too old and healthy to be one.

do yall sell seeds?

Join us on tomorrow, October 10, 2025, from 11:30AM – 1:00PM (EPT), for the next LIVE Chestnut Chat.

Our special guest, Dr. Trevor Walker, Assistant Professor of Forest Genetics and Co-Director of the Cooperative Tree Improvement Program at NC State University, will share insights from 70 years of breeding loblolly pine for disease resistance, growth, and stem form. He will also consider which practices are likely to succeed for American chestnut, which are not, and why.

Visit tacf.org/event/chestnut-chat-breeding-disease-resistance-in-loblolly-pine/ to learn more or register.
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Join us on tomorrow, October 10, 2025, from 11:30AM – 1:00PM (EPT), for the next LIVE Chestnut Chat.Our special guest, Dr. Trevor Walker, Assistant Professor of Forest Genetics and Co-Director of the Cooperative Tree Improvement Program at NC State University, will share insights from 70 years of breeding loblolly pine for disease resistance, growth, and stem form. He will also consider which practices are likely to succeed for American chestnut, which are not, and why.Visit https://tacf.org/event/chestnut-chat-breeding-disease-resistance-in-loblolly-pine/ to learn more or register.

1 CommentComment on Facebook

Just saw this. How was the chat?

Do you love pulling on your work gloves and cracking open freshly fallen burs to reveal the chestnuts inside? If you do, but don’t have any of your own yet, become a member and get access to our wild-type seed sale in 2026. In just a few years, your hands could be full of spiky burs and American chestnuts of your own. support.tacf.org/membership/new-regular ... See MoreSee Less

37 CommentsComment on Facebook

I use my boots to open them!

Porcupine eggs!!😂🤣

I have a bag full.

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We’re proud to share this segment from the PBS show Human Footprint, featuring former TACF staff member Sara Fitzsimmons. The American chestnut sequence was selected to be adapted into a standalone YouTube video, which launched in late September and has already garnered more than half a million views. Sara’s dedication and expertise have shaped much of the progress in restoring the American chestnut. Give it a watch to learn more about this important work. ... See MoreSee Less

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Great presentation!

🌰 Harvest season at TACF’s Meadowview Research Farms brings both beauty and breakthrough science. Many of the chestnut crosses we gather are generated through recurrent genomic selection—cutting-edge research driving restoration forward. Each bur holds not only the wonder of new life, but also the promise of a future where the majestic American chestnut returns to our forests. 🌳

#americanchestnut #castaneadentata #americanchestnutfoundation #ChestnutResearch #meadowviewresearchfarms
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Are there places we can purchases a Chestnut tree that is disease resistant? Thanks!

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