Revised

Editor's note
The following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.

William Reid
Nut Crops Specialist
Kansas State University

Mark Coggeshall
Tree Improvement Specialist
Center for Agroforestry

H.E. "Gene" Garrett
Center for Agroforestry

Jerry Van Sambeek
Research Plant Physiologist
USDA Forest Service

Eastern black walnut trees (Juglans nigra) produce high-value, hardwood products and distinctively flavored, edible nuts. The potential for producing two valuable products from the same tree has captured the imagination of tree planters for years.

The question is not whether a walnut tree can grow both wood and nuts, but rather which crop you wish to maximize. While black walnut trees can be grown for timber and/or nut production, the focus of this guide is toward planting, managing and harvesting top-quality black walnut nuts for sales at the retail or wholesale level from an orchard practice, similar to pecan and other nut trees.

The guide is a collaborative effort of the nut tree research cluster at the Center for Agroforestry and the nut research program of Kansas State University. It is the only one of its kind printed in the U.S. and represents a decade of research on growing black walnut trees in an orchard practice for nut production.

Black walnut treeNuts The black walnut orchard has widely spaced trees that develop a full canopy. Black walnut spurs are 8 to 10 inches long and bear nuts on the branch terminal.
 

Topics

  • Setting orchard goals
  • Cultivar recommendations
  • Nut-bearing habit
  • Methods of orchard design
  • Methods of establishing black walnut trees
  • Care of non-bearing trees
  • Insect control
  • Harvesting
  • Marketing

Pages

  • 16
Publication No. AF1011