Regal Prince Acorns Collected, Tested and Ready for Cold Stratification - November 2023
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgrGuoXyqs1toOA75UU8AkSnOjAXNSVJ4CNK1N74uA4nZeV1hlPll51XQGQf_z6TfCLrU6RsOlwaD0DaQ-7wLpwXN70L44hhsSuqs4nH7FozaPJHDj2hBsP8jm0_39sJpACy9yT91ECoqyBS5SjCHqgYlwfg4jVESSpOjitISEAjXLNb3m07dR8h42D-A/w640-h482/PXL_20231017_155735886.MP.jpg)
For the past few months, I've been collecting acorns for a set of columnar oak trees and have been planning on trying to get them ready to plant up in the Spring. Last Fall, I collected a wide variety of nuts, so when Spring came, I wasn't totally sure what was what. This year, I know I only have one variety. Here's the pile of Regal Prince Oak (columnar) acorns that I started with: I put them in a bucket of water to test which were viable. You can see all the floaters below: I also had three Chestnuts that I tossed in, too. After 12 hours, I fished all the floaters out - below are the number of non-viable acorns. I'd say that's probably half (or more). I went back after 24 hours and found a couple more floating. I fished those out and tossed them for the critters to enjoy: And here, below, is what I was left with: enough acorns to pack away in wet sand and stick in the fridge for Winter: Next Spring, I'll pot them up and see if we can grow ou...