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  • 2 questions about cobnuts

    I’ve just spent half the afternoon raking up fallen cobnuts, thus the questions:
    1. What’s the easiest way of collecting them (off grass)? Raking is very laborious and rather hit or miss as they get embedded, you can’t mow them up, I don’t think you can vacuum them up as the shells are too tough to be mulched, a “lawn leaf sweeper” is one gadget I don’t own but maybe that would work? I can’t pick them up individually, there’s thousands of them, I filled 2 dustbins and there’s still a lot on the grass and many still on the tree so I'll need to repeat this exercise… Suggestions welcome!
    2. I know from experience that many of the nutshells are empty, no nut! The main nut in this endeavour is me collecting the debris! The squirrels get the ones with nuts in, they’re more patient than me at sorting them out and start much earlier. I’ve watched them, they’re super-efficient: having found the shells with nuts in they hide/plant them with the same sequence every time – scoop a hollow, plant the nut, firmly tap it down with the nose, fill in the hollow. Everywhere! In the flower beds, in the hedges, in the raised beds, even in containers and plant pots. I don’t know if they ever retrieve any but I end up with dozens of cobnut seedlings. I grow a few on for a year or two and give them to the local gardener’s Annual Plant Fair marked “Product of Squirrel Enterprises Inc” but I don’t think there's many takers… The question is How can I improve the fertility rate so that more of the nutshells contain a nut?
    .

  • #2
    I maybe nuts but I know nutting about collecting them! However, when we had more apples than we could pick on a tall apple tree, we used to suspend a tarpaulin beneath the tree and bash the branches with sticks to make the apples fall off into the tarpaulin.
    This brilliant suggestion may be too late for you this year but maybe you could plan ahead for 2020.
    PS I have the same problem with hazel nuts and acorns. The squirrels even plant them in the greenhouse - cheeky things.

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    • #3
      We have lots of squirrels round here and I have never harvested any nuts before this year. We have 3 varieties red cobnuts, kentish cob and wild hazel. The reds mature the fastest and I picked usable nuts on the 20th and 23rd August. The kents were picked on 25th (a bit too early) and the 30th of August and the hazel 31st (a bit too early) and then again a week later. As time progressed, there was more evidence of squirrels visiting the trees.
      Depending on your varieties, I would try picking some at intervals from the last week in August onward to find the best time to pick. I left them in a dry place and nuts that came out of the husk easily after a week or so usually had kernels in. Any that stayed put often didn't. If you pick them from the trees, you won't have to rake them up.
      But I'm no expert on nuts by any means.
      Next year, I'll try to leave them on the trees a week longer - but it all depends on the squirrels, they had a lot of my strawberries.

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      • #4
        We have hazelnuts.
        It's a big tree
        I sit on bubble wrap and just shuffle along picking up 2ft x3ft at a time.
        Takes a few hours.
        I've even been known to do it with a plastic bag for a hat.
        It's only once a year and so far the little white van hasn't collected me
        "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

        Location....Normandy France

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        • #5
          I'm going to collect mine in the next couple of weeks.
          "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

          Location....Normandy France

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          • #6
            Many thanks for these bright ideas..... It's a big tree, I'm none too sure about climbing it lol, as I sit here I can see a squirrel leaping from branch to branch.... hmmm, not sure I could do that! Lovely tree, the branches are "straight as a die" (odd expression!) so the occasional one extracted from time to time very useful for garden stakes etc. I'll try picking some at the green stage (the low ones! ) and see if that improves the success percentage. Many thanks. bb.
            .

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            • #7
              An ancillary comment.... "cobnuts" and "hazel nuts" appear to be the same thing though originally may have referred to different varieties. Just to confuse the scene even more they are sometimes referred to as "filberts" and the wonderful Internet informs me that this is probably due to August 20th being a traditional day of picking which is also a French saints' day, St Philbert. Live and learn lol, you ask one question and twenty others appear! Interesting though that the cob/hazel/filbert nut has such an ancient history as a valuable food source - the squirrels know a good thing when they see it even if they forget where they put it! One modern-day human equivalent of storing is the spread "Nutella" which is made from cob/hazel/filberts but, surprise surprise, with a significant addition of sugar...
              .

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              • #8
                oooh you're making me want to get a cobnut!
                https://nodigadventures.blogspot.com/

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                • #9
                  Any variety tips from you growers ?
                  I planted a butler but the kent and nottingham also ordered didnt arrive last year

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by SarrissUK View Post
                    oooh you're making me want to get a cobnut!
                    Maybe your squirrels want you to too! I got one nut this year!
                    Riddlesdown (S Croydon)

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by DannyK View Post
                      Maybe your squirrels want you to too! I got one nut this year!
                      haha I'm sure they would! They'd not come near all my cats though. I was actually thinking more near my allotment. I'm surrounded by plots that can't be used for cultivating, as they have trees nearby that sill spread into any ground that is broken. A huge area will be set aside for trees to create a woodland, so a cobnut or two can be squeezed in
                      https://nodigadventures.blogspot.com/

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by DannyK View Post
                        I got one nut this year!
                        You did well Danny, one more than I got! I'll pick early next year. "Harvest in their green state from mid August" say the knowledgeable ones. But considerable leaf-fall so useful leaf-mould if nothing else. And any surplus boughs are super-straight so useful for stakes.

                        Mr and Mrs Squirrel deserve a freebie meal or two, they work incredibly hard sorting them out and burying them in the most unlikely places (including pots and greenhouse...). They're gardening all day long (even longer hours than my allotment mates some of whom seem to live on their patch... and squirrels don't keep stopping for a cuppa and chat...). Squirrels must either forget where they planted some or have surplus stock because every Spring sees a crop of seedlings appearing. I usually pot a few up and give them to the local gardener's annual sale marked "Squirrel Enterprises Ltd". A bargain at 50p, named varieties from reliable sources can be about £40. So all power to the squirrels! But if they'd leave me a few nuts I'd be obliged...
                        .

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                        • #13
                          Yes and I wasn't even trying to grow them. Just use them as a source of bean sticks.

                          I think the squirrels may have signed their death warrant this year. They've had all my apples and plums, killed a new grape vine, removed all the flower buds from a magnolia, badly damaged other plants and they are now venturing onto the extension roof. I am worried that they may get into the loft next.

                          As for animal planted items, I have had peanuts come up in pots after tempting foxes with them for photos!
                          Riddlesdown (S Croydon)

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