Is anyone familiar with growing juniper trees? I've grown several oaks from acorns and there's some junipers near my place and I'd like to grow more, but I don't know how.
>>968254
Use google, you stupid motherfucker
And here's what the seeds/acorns/whatever-you-call-them look like
>>968260
>Use google, you stupid motherfucker
>>968254
I started out with one juniper tree and the birds loved the berries so much that they spread them everywhere, now I have new juniper sprouting up like weeds
>>968258
>use Google
Then why does this place even exist? Why are you here?
>>968254
I really like gin, it's flavoured with juniper berries
If you know how to vegetative cutting, you wouldn't be asking, so second best is juniper propigation by root cuttings or stooling.
Seeds will work, but you must take the time to research the requirements of the genus.
Plant propigation techniques are too nuanced to learn on a Sengalese finger painting website.
Once they are growing, Juniperus are easy to transplant and withstand harsh conditions except too much shade and too much water.
I used to have a juniper bonsai, it died it died.
also OP ignore the googletards.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiU6USML2bw
Aren't juniper bad? BLM and even ranchers are always eradicating them around where I live.
>>970985
Shitty land management leads to decline of grassland, resulting in brush(juniper) encroachment. This further reduces grasslands. Which means ranchers (& BLM who makes money off of ranchers grazing) lose money.
>>968254
Several types of juniper.
>>971016
They're planted en masse in areas with poor, hilly soil for erosion control.
>>970985
Why does Black Lives Matter hate trees? Do they even get /out/?
>>971032
>bbingo
>>971035
That's a really bad idea. Thick groves of junipers retard the growth of plants like grass that actually DO stabilize soil. In areas where the juniper count goes from very few to whole lots erosion tends to get worse.
>>971016
>>970985
Under historical/natural fire cycles junipers tend to stay confined to steep hillsides and along streams. Suppress fire, and they spread like crazy and choke out all the other vegetation. Then, when it does eventually burn, instead of the fire just scorching off dead vegetation, it burns the entire landscape right down to the bare rock.
The only places where they naturally form stands/woodlands are spots in the Great Basin with a lot of terrain.
>>973972
Oregano?
When I lived in Oregon it literally looks just like that along the highways between cities. Lots-a juniper on flat land. Smells so nice after it rains.
Unfortunately gin tastes so bad....