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Ancient Explorers Discovered Unique Native Nut Trees Growing In America

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History of American nut trees.


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1404 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2006-10-19 10:48:00

Written By:     Patrick Malcolm
Copyright:      2006
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Ancient Explorers Discovered Unique Native Nut Trees Growing In America
Copyright (c) 2006 Patrick Malcolm
Ty Ty Nursery
http://www.tytyga.com



Nuts are different from most other food items. When planted, the
nut contains substances, such as fats, proteins, carbohydrates,
vitamins, and minerals within the nut kernel to survive and
nourish the embryonic nut tree until the roots, stems, and the
leaves are developed enough to independently maintain the
developmental aspects, such as intake of water and minerals by
the roots, and the formation of chlorophyll within the leaves and
stems-thus developing into a living organism, that can survive as
a perennial tree and reproduce more of its kind. The remarkable,
internal, compressed potential within a shelled nut seed offers
to the health of mankind a perfect food, containing all the
necessary elements to successfully survive for short periods of
time. The nuts contain protein, fats, and carbohydrates, being
themselves capable of sustaining life for short periods, but the
high concentrations of these products can make them somewhat
difficult to digest if eaten exclusively in a diet. The
nutritional value of nuts is obvious when compared to the
completeness of survival capability of nut trees, compared with
the nutritional composition and content of such vegetative foods
as cabbage, apples, tomatoes, or other leafy annuals.

The first commercial nursery in the U.S. was established by
Robert Prince in 1737 in Flushing, N.Y. George Washington visited
this nursery by river barge in the spring of 1789, just after
being elected the nation's first President. During the
Revolutionary War, General Washington sent armed guards to
surround and protect this valuable nursery that contained
American pecan trees, 'Carya illinoinensis,' planted from
seeds. When Lewis and Clark conducted their exploration of the
Northwest during the Presidency of Thomas Jefferson, they
returned with collected specimen plants to be used as nursery
stock at Prince Nursery for future propagation, research, and
sale from the New York location.

In 1793 William Bartram reported in his botanical book, Travels,
page 38, that identified American plants and animal names and
Indian encounters that was located just west of Augusta, Georgia
he recorded a nut tree, 'Juglans exalata.'

Bartram went further to describe, Juglans exaltata, "is in great
estimation with the present generation of Indians, particularly,
Juglans exaltata, commonly called the shell-barked hickory."
Bartram went further to explain that the Creek Indians collected
hundreds of bushels of the nuts, crushed them into oily masses
and strained out the woody, floating nut material, leaving the
oily liquid named, (hickoy) "hiccory" milk as fresh, sweet and
rich as cream". This "hiccory" (hickory) cream was used in
preparing their cooking specialties "especially hominy and corn
cakes.

In his book, Travels, Page 318, William Bartram found various nut
and fruit trees growing near Wrightsville, Ga. In 1773 he found
"Juglans hickory;" and the American filbert, (Hazlenut),
"Corylus," and Fruit Trees; Red Mulberry "Morus rubra" American
persimmon, "Diospyros;" Wild Cherry, "Prunus padus," and the Wild
Plum, "Prunus indica."

Bartram, page 425, noted in Travels, that at"Manchae, on the
banks of the Mississippi noted that he discovered, "under the
shadow of a grand forest; the trees of the first order in
magnitude and beauty, as Magnolia grandiflora, Liriodendron
tulipifera, Platanus........Fraxinus excelsior," the Red
mulberry, "Morus rubra, Laurus sassafras........Tilea,
liquidambar styraciflua & c."

On Page 398, Bartram also identified in Alabama, Hickory Trees,
"Hiccory",.... Black Walnut, Juglans nigra,....and an abundance
of Chestnut trees on the hills with Pinus taeda and Pinus lutea.
On Page 401, Bartram noticed near Mobile, Al "The highest hills
near large creeks afford high forests with an abundance of
chestnut trees."

Bartram, on page 365, identified the American chestnut as being
important in the construction of Cherokee Indian buildings, which
was quite different from the habits of the Creek Indians. Bartram
wrote, "and the whole covered or roofed with the bark of the
chestnut tree [American] or long broad shingles."

On Page 181 and Page l85, Bartram described finding, "Juglans
cinerea", and various allied plant populations after crossing the
Savannah River and going into Florida, "the forest consisted of
orange groves, overtopped by grand Magnolias, Palms, Live Oaks,
Juglans cinerea, Morus rubra, Fagus sylvatica, Tilia, and
Liquidambar.

On Page 437 of Travels, William Bartram "Observed growing in a
garden in Mobile, two large trees of the Juglans pecan."

William Bartram in Travels, page 83, was very impressed with the
nut (acorn) of the live oak tree, that was used by wildlife and
by the Indians for food. Bartram stated that the live oak tree
"bears a prodigious quantity of fruit; the acorn is small, but
sweet and agreeable to the taste when roasted." Bartram stated
that acorns were food for animals. "The Indians obtain from it a
sweet oil, which they use in the cooking of hommony, rice, and
they also roast it in hot embers, eating it as we do chestnuts.

Thomas Jefferson planted pecan trees, 'Carya illinoinensis,'
(Illinois nuts) in his nut orchard at his beautiful home,
Monticello, in Virginia; and George Washington reported in his
journal that Thomas Jefferson gave him "Illinois nuts;" pecans
which grew at Mount Vernon, Virginia, George Washington's home.
The pecan trees grew and remain majestic in height and spread
proudly, even today. He called agriculture, "the noblest of
occupations."

Although most nuts are a product of perennial trees, some are
produced on bushes. We have learned from the fossil record of
ancient mound builders, that have been unearthed by archeological
excavations and explorations in America, Asia, and Europe, that
nuts have been collected as food for centuries. Nuts were
gathered from shrubs or nut trees for either immediate fresh
eating or to preserve in a dark, cool place for future food
reserves. Some ancient cultures ground-up the nut kernels into a
flour to use in bread preparations, while others boiled the nut
kernels and used the creamy, oily extract in their food in many
ways. The nuts, roots, leaves, tree stems, and nut hulls were
often used as medicinal remedies for health problems.

The geographical range of nut trees covers most of the United
States and pecan trees, American chestnut trees, California
walnut trees, and shagbark hickory trees are native trees, some
occurring as widely distributed natural forests. Hickory trees
perhaps cover a wider range, because of the cold hardiness, than
any of the other nut trees. Despite the fact of the pecan tree's
Southern origin, the nut shows a surprisingly resilient
resistance to cold. The pecan tree will live through low
temperatures of zero degrees Fahrenheit and other drastic, sudden
weather changes.

The most satisfactory nut trees grown in the United States on a
commercial scale, by backyard gardeners, or by tree collectors
are Almond tree, 'Prunus dulcis,' American chestnut tree,
'Castanea dentata,' Chinese chestnut tree, 'Castanea sativa,'
Allegheny chinquapin (chinkapin) tree, 'Casanea pumila,'
American filbert (hazelnut) tree, 'Corylus americana,' shagbark
hickory tree, 'Carya ovata,' pecan tree, 'Carya
illinnoinensis,' Butternut walnut (white walnut) tree, 'Juglans
cinerea,' California walnut tree, 'Juglans hindsii,' black
walnut tree, 'Juglans nigra,' English (Persian) walnut tree,
'Juglans regia,' and Heartnut walnut tree, 'Juglans
ailantifolia.'

Many tropical nut trees, such as cashew trees, macadamia nut
trees, and Brazil nut trees, can not be grown in most climate
zones of the Unite States except Hawaii, extreme southern
Florida, and extreme southern California.

Most nut tasters and food gourmets agree that the shelled pecan
is a much more desirable nut in respect to the flavor, cost of
production , and an available nut supply over almonds, but the
aggressive and cooperative superior marketing promotion of the
Almond Nut Association has left the bureaucratic and primitive
marketing strategies of the Southern Pecan Association far
behind. One advantage gained by almond tree promoters is that all
European and Mideastern countries grew and used almond nuts in
their food supply for centuries, and pecan nut promoters have not
properly distributed and advertised this unfamiliar American
product to a massive market exposure, and to those foreign
markets to the sampling of the pecan that is necessary to be
successful. Pecan shelled nuts also offer tremendous benefits to
healthy bodies since their kernels contain extremely high
concentrations of polyunsaturated fatty acids, that are so high
in antioxidants, and they protect the heart by removing clogging
cholesterols that interfere with blood flow in veins and
arteries.

A recent cost comparison of shelled nuts showed that almonds cost
$6.00 per pound, walnuts $4.50 per pounds, and pecans $9.00 per
pound. Nuts offer a delicious, healthy product to world markets
with profitable financial rewards to those who choose to plant
nut trees and market the the shelled product.




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Written by: Patrick Malcolm. Learn more about various trees 
by visiting the author's website: http://www.tytyga.com


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