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Answer for the clue "Oak and elm ", 5 letters:
trees

Alternative clues for the word trees

Usage examples of trees.

The discussion of specific nut tree cultivars and of specific techniques to grow nut trees that might have been successful in one area and at a particular time is not a guarantee that similar results will occur elsewhere.

Littlepage: That the association request the Secretary of Agriculture to include in his estimates of appropriations for the next fiscal year a sum sufficient, in his judgment, to enable the department to carry on a continuous survey of nut culture, including the investigation and study of nut trees throughout the northern states, such nut trees including all the native varieties of nuts, hickories, walnuts, butternuts and any sub-divisions of those varieties, and that a committee of three be appointed to interview the secretary personally to have this amount included in the appropriation.

I have had my attention called to the fact that in the West the beech trees are heavily laden with nuts.

I know there are many beech trees around Stamford, but I have not been able to find any nuts.

I have a great many beech trees on my place from one year to more than one hundred years of age, and they came from natural seeding, but the seeds in this part of Connecticut are very small and shrivelled.

They are not valuable like the ones in western New York, for instance, and I do not remember even as a boy to have known of eastern beech trees with well-filled nuts.

I have been observing these beech trees, there has never grown upon them a single full, fertile beech nut.

Association can do a splendid work by the interesting of all land owners in the conservation of the native nut trees and the planting of grafted nut trees in gardens, orchards and yards, to take the place of many worthless shade trees.

In sections of the country the different kind of nut trees suitable could be selected and, if planted and given proper care, would be a source of large income in the years that are to come.

When this organization first came into existence there was a small demand for budded and grafted nut trees, but none were to be had in the hardy northern varieties.

Methods of propagation have been worked out, public opinion has been moulded, government investigation has been fostered, commercial planting of northern nut trees made possible, and today pecans, English walnuts and best varieties of grafted black walnuts may be had in quantity.

This association has caused thousands of nut trees to be planted that would otherwise not have been.

If mounds of earth one foot high are banked around trees before first cold weather it will often prevent bark bursting which may be caused by freezing of the trees when full of sap, caused by late growth.

Nut trees form new rootlets slowly the first summer and require special care.

This effort will bring out varieties that are worthy of propagation and valuable trees will be saved to posterity.