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#chestnut — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #chestnut, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Ergänzend zu eben und gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten, schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Nun auch von nahem:
    Das Ganze in Rot!

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  2. Ergänzend zu eben und gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten, schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Nun auch von nahem:
    Das Ganze in Rot!

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  3. Ergänzend zu eben und gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten, schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Nun auch von nahem:
    Das Ganze in Rot!

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  4. Ergänzend zu eben und gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten, schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Nun auch von nahem:
    Das Ganze in Rot!

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  5. Ergänzend zu eben und gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten, schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Nun auch von nahem:
    Das Ganze in Rot!

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  6. Ergänzend zu gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten,
    schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Hier jetzt von nahem:
    Die weiße Variante...

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  7. Ergänzend zu gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten,
    schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Hier jetzt von nahem:
    Die weiße Variante...

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  8. Ergänzend zu gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten,
    schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Hier jetzt von nahem:
    Die weiße Variante...

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  9. Ergänzend zu gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten,
    schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Hier jetzt von nahem:
    Die weiße Variante...

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  10. Ergänzend zu gestern,
    #unterwegs, am #Straßenrand:

    Die #Kastanien blühen,
    mit tausenden Kerzen...

    Kurz innehalten,
    schauen,
    sich freuen: Schön!

    Hier jetzt von nahem:
    Die weiße Variante...

    #Kastanie #Rosskastanie #Baum
    #Blüte #Natur #Straße #chestnut
    #tree #blossom #nature #street
    #Frühling #spring

  11. #chestnut : one of the round, or oval, horny plates on the inner sides of the legs of the horse, and allied animals

    - French: chataigne

    - German: die Kastanie

    - Italian: castagna

    - Portuguese: castanha

    - Spanish: castaña

    ------------

    Try Christian's word chain building game @ wordwallgame.com

  12. #chestnut : one of the round, or oval, horny plates on the inner sides of the legs of the horse, and allied animals

    - French: chataigne

    - German: die Kastanie

    - Italian: castagna

    - Portuguese: castanha

    - Spanish: castaña

    ------------

    Try Christian's word chain building game @ wordwallgame.com

  13. #chestnut : one of the round, or oval, horny plates on the inner sides of the legs of the horse, and allied animals

    - French: chataigne

    - German: die Kastanie

    - Italian: castagna

    - Portuguese: castanha

    - Spanish: castaña

    ------------

    Try Christian's word chain building game @ wordwallgame.com

  14. #chestnut : one of the round, or oval, horny plates on the inner sides of the legs of the horse, and allied animals

    - French: chataigne

    - German: die Kastanie

    - Italian: castagna

    - Portuguese: castanha

    - Spanish: castaña

    ------------

    Try Christian's word chain building game @ wordwallgame.com

  15. #chestnut : one of the round, or oval, horny plates on the inner sides of the legs of the horse, and allied animals

    - French: chataigne

    - German: die Kastanie

    - Italian: castagna

    - Portuguese: castanha

    - Spanish: castaña

    ------------

    Try Christian's word chain building game @ wordwallgame.com

  16. 💡Idea for inspiration from Tuscany, where a #CAP-funded project aimed at combating #climatechange in the region, has harnessed the antioxidant potential of an iconic waste material – the #chestnut burr- while increasing revenues for chestnut producers🌰
    eu-cap-network.ec.europa.eu/go

  17. 💡Idea for inspiration from Tuscany, where a #CAP-funded project aimed at combating #climatechange in the region, has harnessed the antioxidant potential of an iconic waste material – the #chestnut burr- while increasing revenues for chestnut producers🌰
    eu-cap-network.ec.europa.eu/go

  18. 💡Idea for inspiration from Tuscany, where a #CAP-funded project aimed at combating #climatechange in the region, has harnessed the antioxidant potential of an iconic waste material – the #chestnut burr- while increasing revenues for chestnut producers🌰
    eu-cap-network.ec.europa.eu/go

  19. 💡Idea for inspiration from Tuscany, where a #CAP-funded project aimed at combating #climatechange in the region, has harnessed the antioxidant potential of an iconic waste material – the #chestnut burr- while increasing revenues for chestnut producers🌰
    eu-cap-network.ec.europa.eu/go

  20. 💡Idea for inspiration from Tuscany, where a #CAP-funded project aimed at combating #climatechange in the region, has harnessed the antioxidant potential of an iconic waste material – the #chestnut burr- while increasing revenues for chestnut producers🌰
    eu-cap-network.ec.europa.eu/go

  21. So, attempts to create a blight-resistant #AmericanChestnutTree using wheat genes failed (gee, I wonder why)... However, cross-pollination (by hand) between American and Chinese #ChestnutTrees (the Chinese ones are resistant to blight) worked!!! Sometimes tried-and-true "old fashioned" tech is the best tech!

    The fight for a fallen giant: Bringing back the American #chestnut

    by N.C. Forest Service | May 3, 2024

    "More than a century ago, the American chestnut (#CastaneaDentata) was a common overstory tree across portions of eastern North American forests. These giants thrived on moist, well drained slopes and ridges across the Appalachians, towering more than 100 feet tall with an average diameter at breast height (DBH) of five to eight feet. Their historical range extended into the southeastern deciduous forests of Canada and as far south as Florida.

    "According to legend, American chestnut trees were once so abundant in eastern North America that a squirrel could travel the chestnut canopy from Georgia to Maine without ever touching the ground. However, fossil pollen records and early forest inventory records suggest the American chestnut may not have been as dominant a tree species across its entire range as depicted. Early forest inventories conducted by Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent forest ecologist and botanist, suggest the species was of surprisingly limited dominance in many parts across the Appalachians, except for the central and southern ranges.

    "With their ability to rapidly sprout from stumps and reach maturity in as little as eight years, the American chestnut likely benefited from intensive logging of the past. This rapid regeneration, coupled with possible allelopathic properties that suppress competing trees, would have allowed them to quickly reclaim their place in the forest canopy following disturbance. This advantage may have been particularly significant in the northern part of their range, likely contributing to the historical accounts describing the American chestnut’s remarkable abundance across the landscape. Nonetheless, American chestnut reigned as a keystone species with immense ecological value. With its strong, rot resistant wood and abundant annual crop of nutrient dense chestnuts, the American chestnut was once an invaluable hardwood for humans and wildlife before the #ChestnutBlight decimated its populations in the early 1900s, leaving a lasting scar on eastern North American forests."

    Learn more:
    blog.ncagr.gov/2024/05/03/the-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Trees #ChestnutTrees #SaveTheForests #SaveTheTrees

  22. So, attempts to create a blight-resistant #AmericanChestnutTree using wheat genes failed (gee, I wonder why)... However, cross-pollination (by hand) between American and Chinese #ChestnutTrees (the Chinese ones are resistant to blight) worked!!! Sometimes tried-and-true "old fashioned" tech is the best tech!

    The fight for a fallen giant: Bringing back the American #chestnut

    by N.C. Forest Service | May 3, 2024

    "More than a century ago, the American chestnut (#CastaneaDentata) was a common overstory tree across portions of eastern North American forests. These giants thrived on moist, well drained slopes and ridges across the Appalachians, towering more than 100 feet tall with an average diameter at breast height (DBH) of five to eight feet. Their historical range extended into the southeastern deciduous forests of Canada and as far south as Florida.

    "According to legend, American chestnut trees were once so abundant in eastern North America that a squirrel could travel the chestnut canopy from Georgia to Maine without ever touching the ground. However, fossil pollen records and early forest inventory records suggest the American chestnut may not have been as dominant a tree species across its entire range as depicted. Early forest inventories conducted by Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent forest ecologist and botanist, suggest the species was of surprisingly limited dominance in many parts across the Appalachians, except for the central and southern ranges.

    "With their ability to rapidly sprout from stumps and reach maturity in as little as eight years, the American chestnut likely benefited from intensive logging of the past. This rapid regeneration, coupled with possible allelopathic properties that suppress competing trees, would have allowed them to quickly reclaim their place in the forest canopy following disturbance. This advantage may have been particularly significant in the northern part of their range, likely contributing to the historical accounts describing the American chestnut’s remarkable abundance across the landscape. Nonetheless, American chestnut reigned as a keystone species with immense ecological value. With its strong, rot resistant wood and abundant annual crop of nutrient dense chestnuts, the American chestnut was once an invaluable hardwood for humans and wildlife before the #ChestnutBlight decimated its populations in the early 1900s, leaving a lasting scar on eastern North American forests."

    Learn more:
    blog.ncagr.gov/2024/05/03/the-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Trees #ChestnutTrees #SaveTheForests #SaveTheTrees

  23. So, attempts to create a blight-resistant #AmericanChestnutTree using wheat genes failed (gee, I wonder why)... However, cross-pollination (by hand) between American and Chinese #ChestnutTrees (the Chinese ones are resistant to blight) worked!!! Sometimes tried-and-true "old fashioned" tech is the best tech!

    The fight for a fallen giant: Bringing back the American #chestnut

    by N.C. Forest Service | May 3, 2024

    "More than a century ago, the American chestnut (#CastaneaDentata) was a common overstory tree across portions of eastern North American forests. These giants thrived on moist, well drained slopes and ridges across the Appalachians, towering more than 100 feet tall with an average diameter at breast height (DBH) of five to eight feet. Their historical range extended into the southeastern deciduous forests of Canada and as far south as Florida.

    "According to legend, American chestnut trees were once so abundant in eastern North America that a squirrel could travel the chestnut canopy from Georgia to Maine without ever touching the ground. However, fossil pollen records and early forest inventory records suggest the American chestnut may not have been as dominant a tree species across its entire range as depicted. Early forest inventories conducted by Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent forest ecologist and botanist, suggest the species was of surprisingly limited dominance in many parts across the Appalachians, except for the central and southern ranges.

    "With their ability to rapidly sprout from stumps and reach maturity in as little as eight years, the American chestnut likely benefited from intensive logging of the past. This rapid regeneration, coupled with possible allelopathic properties that suppress competing trees, would have allowed them to quickly reclaim their place in the forest canopy following disturbance. This advantage may have been particularly significant in the northern part of their range, likely contributing to the historical accounts describing the American chestnut’s remarkable abundance across the landscape. Nonetheless, American chestnut reigned as a keystone species with immense ecological value. With its strong, rot resistant wood and abundant annual crop of nutrient dense chestnuts, the American chestnut was once an invaluable hardwood for humans and wildlife before the #ChestnutBlight decimated its populations in the early 1900s, leaving a lasting scar on eastern North American forests."

    Learn more:
    blog.ncagr.gov/2024/05/03/the-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Trees #ChestnutTrees #SaveTheForests #SaveTheTrees

  24. So, attempts to create a blight-resistant #AmericanChestnutTree using wheat genes failed (gee, I wonder why)... However, cross-pollination (by hand) between American and Chinese #ChestnutTrees (the Chinese ones are resistant to blight) worked!!! Sometimes tried-and-true "old fashioned" tech is the best tech!

    The fight for a fallen giant: Bringing back the American #chestnut

    by N.C. Forest Service | May 3, 2024

    "More than a century ago, the American chestnut (#CastaneaDentata) was a common overstory tree across portions of eastern North American forests. These giants thrived on moist, well drained slopes and ridges across the Appalachians, towering more than 100 feet tall with an average diameter at breast height (DBH) of five to eight feet. Their historical range extended into the southeastern deciduous forests of Canada and as far south as Florida.

    "According to legend, American chestnut trees were once so abundant in eastern North America that a squirrel could travel the chestnut canopy from Georgia to Maine without ever touching the ground. However, fossil pollen records and early forest inventory records suggest the American chestnut may not have been as dominant a tree species across its entire range as depicted. Early forest inventories conducted by Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent forest ecologist and botanist, suggest the species was of surprisingly limited dominance in many parts across the Appalachians, except for the central and southern ranges.

    "With their ability to rapidly sprout from stumps and reach maturity in as little as eight years, the American chestnut likely benefited from intensive logging of the past. This rapid regeneration, coupled with possible allelopathic properties that suppress competing trees, would have allowed them to quickly reclaim their place in the forest canopy following disturbance. This advantage may have been particularly significant in the northern part of their range, likely contributing to the historical accounts describing the American chestnut’s remarkable abundance across the landscape. Nonetheless, American chestnut reigned as a keystone species with immense ecological value. With its strong, rot resistant wood and abundant annual crop of nutrient dense chestnuts, the American chestnut was once an invaluable hardwood for humans and wildlife before the #ChestnutBlight decimated its populations in the early 1900s, leaving a lasting scar on eastern North American forests."

    Learn more:
    blog.ncagr.gov/2024/05/03/the-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Trees #ChestnutTrees #SaveTheForests #SaveTheTrees

  25. So, attempts to create a blight-resistant #AmericanChestnutTree using wheat genes failed (gee, I wonder why)... However, cross-pollination (by hand) between American and Chinese #ChestnutTrees (the Chinese ones are resistant to blight) worked!!! Sometimes tried-and-true "old fashioned" tech is the best tech!

    The fight for a fallen giant: Bringing back the American #chestnut

    by N.C. Forest Service | May 3, 2024

    "More than a century ago, the American chestnut (#CastaneaDentata) was a common overstory tree across portions of eastern North American forests. These giants thrived on moist, well drained slopes and ridges across the Appalachians, towering more than 100 feet tall with an average diameter at breast height (DBH) of five to eight feet. Their historical range extended into the southeastern deciduous forests of Canada and as far south as Florida.

    "According to legend, American chestnut trees were once so abundant in eastern North America that a squirrel could travel the chestnut canopy from Georgia to Maine without ever touching the ground. However, fossil pollen records and early forest inventory records suggest the American chestnut may not have been as dominant a tree species across its entire range as depicted. Early forest inventories conducted by Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent forest ecologist and botanist, suggest the species was of surprisingly limited dominance in many parts across the Appalachians, except for the central and southern ranges.

    "With their ability to rapidly sprout from stumps and reach maturity in as little as eight years, the American chestnut likely benefited from intensive logging of the past. This rapid regeneration, coupled with possible allelopathic properties that suppress competing trees, would have allowed them to quickly reclaim their place in the forest canopy following disturbance. This advantage may have been particularly significant in the northern part of their range, likely contributing to the historical accounts describing the American chestnut’s remarkable abundance across the landscape. Nonetheless, American chestnut reigned as a keystone species with immense ecological value. With its strong, rot resistant wood and abundant annual crop of nutrient dense chestnuts, the American chestnut was once an invaluable hardwood for humans and wildlife before the #ChestnutBlight decimated its populations in the early 1900s, leaving a lasting scar on eastern North American forests."

    Learn more:
    blog.ncagr.gov/2024/05/03/the-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Trees #ChestnutTrees #SaveTheForests #SaveTheTrees

  26. Chapter 10 – olde family Christmas and stuffings recipes (pdf)

    December 2025 Here's a scanned PDF of my old copies of our family turkey and stuffings recipes, particularly can recommend the "lemon and parsley" and the "chestnut and sausage" stuffings. christmas_turkey_recipes_familyDownload

    devenirgris.com/2025/12/23/cha

  27. Kontrol Room NYE 2026 Party @ Kontrol Room - 31 Dec feat. Chestnut

    #SESH #Chestnut

    sesh.sx/e/1457272