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Patience: Growing walnut trees
for profit is long term investment
 
By Doug Graves
Ohio Correspondent
NEW PHILADELPHIA,
Ohio – It’s no secret that
producers everywhere are
looking for that extra niche
to help them pad their bank
account, whether it’s agritourism,
a new specialty
crop or simply an off-thefarm,
money-making hobby.
A few venturous producers
across all states in the
lower 48 have become full
or part-time tree farmers,
many of them concentrating
on the Christmas Tree market.
But one tree in particular
is garnering lots of attention
the past five years – the
black walnut.
Ten miles outside of New
Philadelphia, you’ll find 20
acres of black walnut trees
flanking fields of corn and
soybeans. The owners of
that tree orchard, Randall
Elder, 72, and his son, David,
46, refer to the trees as
“David’s Walnut IRA.”
“My father was tending
to his 30 acres of corn, soybeans
and some sheep at
the time and for unknown
reason he had another 20
acres of rich, untilled land
that was left untouched,”
Randall said. “Neighboring
farmers thought dad was a
bit strange when he started
planting walnuts in a 12-
foot by 12-foot grid with the
intention of covering that
open acreage with these
trees. His dream was to have
tall-standing walnut trees to
harvest in the future.”
That future is now, but
it didn’t all happen without
a lot of work and planning.
As the plants grew he had
to gradually thin them to a
wider spacing.
“With the high price of
black walnut logs, David
has enough walnut acreage
to become a millionaire,”
Randall said.
According to experts at
Yoder Lumber Co., of Parkersburg,
W.V., black walnut
trees, when planted to maximize
tree growth, can grow
as much as 3-4 feet per year
in good soil, reaching a mature
height of more than
100 feet and 30-40 inches
in diameter, with 16-inch
diameter logs ready to harvest
in 30 years.
Black walnut logs bring
premium prices and have
since the 1700s, with single
trees bringing up to
$20,000. Bruce Thompson,
author of “Black Walnut For
Profit,” estimates a mature
stand of black walnut trees
can bring about $100,000
per acre in timber value
alone. The fine, straightgrained
wood is used for
furniture, veneer and gunstocks.
Black walnut trees are
native to the central and
eastern United States, but
also do well in other parts of
the country, and are grown
for both nuts and timber.
Randall’s father used
the process called “agroforestry,”
which uses double
cropping of trees with pasture
crops for harvesting or
livestock grazing. Trees are
planted in widely spaced
rows, at about 100 trees per
acre, with other crops between
the rows. In addition
to pasture crops, his father
grew high-value crops of
raspberries and blueberries.
Agroforestry can provide
income four different ways.
For the first few years, the
only income is from the crop
planted between the trees.
As the trees become larger,
they are thinned for nut production,
with the wood from
the thinning being sold.
Then, the nuts produce additional
income. When the
remaining thinned trees are
mature, they are harvested
for veneer logs.
“The thinning encourages
rapid growth of the best
trees and removes less than
perfect trees,” Randall said.
“The culled trees bring premium
prices, even in small
sizes.”
Culls are cut into 3-foot
lengths and dried for gunstock
blanks, which can
bring as much as $300
each. To utilize even smaller
sections of cull walnut logs
such as limbs, manufacturers
are using them for
items like pen holders, paperweights
and bookends.
According to the Mountain
Lumber Co., of Crozet, Va.,
for these uses, rough knotty
wood is just as good as the
high grade logs. A company
representative adds that the
average return from a stand
of walnut trees is 14 percent
a year, with no taxes due
until harvest.
“That beats returns on
bonds, stocks and most
other investments handily,”
David said, “and with intercropping,
growers can even
produce an income while
the walnut trees continue
to grow. Growing these trees
take time and patience,
make no doubt, but a living
legacy of walnut trees can
be a priceless gift for children
and grandchildren. I’m
proof of that.”
The nuts have become
another money-maker for
the Elder family. Black walnut
harvesting is going on
now and the current prices
is $16 per 100 pounds
(after hulled) west of the
Mississippi River, and $15
per 100 pounds east of the
Mississippi River. Hammons
Black Walnuts hosts
many traveling hulling and
purchasing stations across
each state in the Midwest.
In Indiana, for example,
there are 20 such stations.
Kentucky has 23 stations,
while Ohio has 13. Michigan
and Tennessee each
have six Hammons stations.
For locations of these states
in each state go to https://
black-walnuts.com/.
“It’s true, a walnut orchard
like ours can take a
few decades to come into full
production, but then produces
up to 6,000 pounds
of nuts per acre,” Randall
said. “While waiting for the
trees to fully mature they’re
still providing you with an
income with their nuts.”
11/10/2020