Black Walnut 20 Nuts Juglans nigra Eastern Balck Walnut, Canada Native Fresh Seeds for Sale by Hundredfold, for Planting, Ontario Grown
Regular price
$25.99 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$25.99 USD
Unit price
per
- The sweet meat makes black walnuts desirable for humans and wildlife
- A beautiful shade tree with four-season interests
- Black walnut produces juglone, a toxin that suppresses other plants. Some shrubs are juglone tolerant and can grow well with walnuts. Among them, are rose, elderberry, pawpaw, and raspberry
- Each package contains 20 nuts that are packed and shipped from Ontario
- Hundredfold has been a trusted Canadian trademark since 2017. Good fruits multiply.
- Note: No husks on the nuts. Please store them in a dark, dry, and cool place
- USDA Zone 4-9, hard to survive in Northern Ontario and Northern Quebec (Sudbury, Saint-Georges and up)
Nutcracking might be a part of many people’s childhood memories. Many kids grew up cracking walnuts with their families. The meat picked from a shell is certainly sweeter than the store-bought one. One may have more fun working with black walnut, an Ontario native. The hard shell makes the job difficult, yet the size of the nut gives him or her some hope to try...
Centuries ago, before the invention of satellites and GPS, early settlers used black walnut trees as a major indicator for good lands. Where the nut trees appear, where the tranquil waters and rich soils are.
Centuries ago, before the invention of satellites and GPS, early settlers used black walnut trees as a major indicator for good lands. Where the nut trees appear, where the tranquil waters and rich soils are.
Please read on if you think the walnuts are ordinary.
Black walnut trees were once South Ontario staples. Everywhere you drove, as long as it was in full sun and spacious, there was a black walnut tree. Not so now, many old trees were cut down and placed with new buildings and the like.
Many can't see the beauty of these Ontario native. Even though they are stately and refreshing, for centuries, they generously provide and silently carry on...
If you are privileged enough to own or manage a land that can sustain large trees, please give these black walnuts a chance. So that future generations can also enjoy the bounty of this land.