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nut seeds for planting

nut seeds for planting Carpathian English Walnut Tree Seeds

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Description

nut seeds for planting Carpathian English Walnut Tree SeedsThe finest nut in the world. Cold hardy enough to grow almost anywhere. Juglans regia, the English Walnut or Persian Walnut, is the walnut that appears in every grocery store and on every holiday table, the species responsible for virtually the entire global commercial walnut industry, producing the richest, mildest, most complex flavored nut of any walnut species. The Carpathian selections are cold hardy strains collected from the Carpathian

The finest nut in the world. Cold-hardy enough to grow almost anywhere.

Juglans regia, the English Walnut or Persian Walnut, is the walnut that appears in every grocery store and on every holiday table, the species responsible for virtually the entire global commercial walnut industry, producing the richest, mildest, most complex-flavored nut of any walnut species. The Carpathian selections are cold-hardy strains collected from the Carpathian Mountains of Poland and Ukraine, capable of surviving winters that would kill standard English Walnut orchards grown from California seed stock, extending the range of commercial-quality English Walnut production into zone 4 and even marginal zone 3 in sheltered locations. Growing Carpathian English Walnut from seed produces trees with the cold hardiness of the mountain source combined with the superior nut quality that has made English Walnut the most commercially valuable nut crop in the world. If you are looking to buy English Walnut seeds or grow Carpathian Walnut from seed, this is the walnut that delivers gourmet-quality nuts in climates where most English Walnut varieties cannot survive.

  • The most commercially valuable and widely eaten nut in the world, produced by every standard English Walnut
  • Carpathian selections cold-hardy to zone 4, significantly more cold-tolerant than standard California walnut stock
  • Produces thin-shelled, mild, rich-flavored nuts superior in taste to Black Walnut or Butternut
  • Large, attractive shade tree with compound leaves and yellow fall color
  • Begins producing nuts within 5 to 7 years from seed under good growing conditions

Things you probably did not know about the Carpathian English Walnut

The trees were discovered by a Canadian minister traveling in Poland in 1927. Reverend Paul Crath, a Ukrainian-Canadian minister, observed walnut trees surviving harsh Carpathian winters while traveling through Poland and Ukraine in the 1920s. He collected seeds from the hardiest specimens and brought them back to Canada, where they were distributed and evaluated. The Carpathian strains that emerged from this introduction extended English Walnut cultivation hundreds of miles north of its previous cold limit, transforming what was a mild-climate specialty crop into a viable option for northern growers.

The English Walnut originated in the mountain forests of Central Asia, not England. Despite the common name, English Walnut is native to a region stretching from the Carpathians through Turkey, Iran, and the Caucasus to Central Asia and the Himalayas. The name English refers to the role of English merchants in distributing the nuts throughout northern Europe and eventually to North America, not to any English origin of the species. In most of the world it is called the Persian Walnut or Common Walnut.

The green hulls stain everything they touch permanently. The green outer hull surrounding the walnut shell contains juglone and other compounds that produce a dark brown stain that is essentially permanent on fabric, concrete, skin, and most other materials. This staining property was exploited for centuries as a fabric dye and hair coloring across Central Asia and Europe. The walnut hull dye was used to color cloth, leather, and wooden furniture throughout the ancient and medieval world.

Cold-hardy Carpathian seedlings vary significantly in nut quality and cold tolerance. Growing from seed produces natural variation in both cold hardiness and nut characteristics including shell thickness, kernel size, flavor intensity, and yield. The best seed-grown Carpathian specimens can rival grafted commercial varieties in nut quality while the less favorable individuals may have thicker shells or lower production. This variation makes growing from seed a genuine discovery process with the possibility of selecting and propagating superior individuals.

Growing Details

  • Botanical Name: Juglans regia
  • Stratification: Required, 90 to 120 days cold moist stratification, recalcitrant seed, keep moist
  • USDA Zones: 4 to 9 for Carpathian selections
  • Soil: Deep, well-drained, slightly acidic to neutral, intolerant of compacted or waterlogged soils
  • Light: Full sun
  • Height: 40 to 60 feet
  • Spread: 40 to 60 feet
  • Growth Rate: Moderate to fast, 1.5 to 2.5 feet per year

Plant it in the deepest, best-drained soil available and give it room. In seven years you will have English walnuts. In twenty years you will have one of the finest shade trees on the property and more nuts than you can use.

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Dr. Lee D. Carlson
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
A 50 carat learning gem
The teaching of American history in elementary and middle schools reminds one of the cleaning of a commode: any rings or crud are removed and the bowl is disinfected. It then looks shiny and pretty, as if no foul stuffs were ever deposited in it. The tall tales and antiseptic methodologies employed in the teaching of American history in these citadels of bias are finally being countered by some historians, who are also clearly biased but self-consciously so. They do not hesitate to study the foul stuffs that have been part of the history of the United States, and are willing to put up with the strong odors thereof. What results in their writings is a compilation of the facts that are left unreported by the sycophants of established educational hierarchies. The picture they paint is not a pretty one, but for those who desire the bare, naked truth, and not the stale platitudes of whitewashed historical analysis, it can be a grand viewing. The author of this book is one of these new historians, and he does not hesitate to dig deep into the real stories that have remained hidden for decades. Historical analysis of course is more then muckracking, and requires an accounting of what has occurred in the past without blinders. It also must put to rest the notion that historical events are controlled by a ruling elite, and the latter are not the distinguishing features of history. History is not a history of kings, queens, and princesses. They play a role but it is an ancillary one. The title of this book refreshingly reminds us of this. History is governed and directed by the actions of many individuals, known and unknown. The author calls them "the people", and their story is told unabashedly in this book. The author is clearly a socialist, but his attitude is one of a healthy skepticism towards government, and justified distrust of the military establishment. He reminds us that the draft was in place as early as the Revolutionary War, as were the exceptions granted for avoidance of it. For example in Connecticut Yale students and faculty were exempted from the draft, as were ministers and various government officials. There was also the familiar schism between officers and "ordinary" soldiers, and any in the latter class who chose not to respect this distinction were whipped severely. Wealthy individuals dominated the Continental Congress, but most "ordinary" soldiers were not getting paid. Some groups of "ordinary" soldiers rebelled and some executed by firing squad when the rebellion was suppressed (in one case by soldiers of George Washington himself who led the suppression). The author's commentary and documentation on the Revolutionary War certainly act as a counterexample against the belief that this war had universal support and thought of as a noble cause by the general populace of the time. The Revolutionary War, like all other wars, was an ugly, messy affair, and had its share of false patriotism, brutality, and cowardice, and it affected many other peoples that had no interest or stake in it: native American tribes such as the Iroquois and the Mohawk. These tribes did not come under the umbrella of the Declaration of Independence. Some of these tribes therefore launched, with complete justification, a guerilla war against the new American citizenry, especially when the latter decided to push westward and indulge itself in the forced acquisition of land. The author tells us of the smallpox biological warfare launched against the Appalachian tribes by the British, causing a major epidemic. He tell us of the thousands of black slaves who fought with the British in the Revolutionary War, as did the majority of the Indian tribes. He tell us of the keeping of slaves by Thomas Jefferson throughout his life, of the fact that most of the authors of the Constitution were men of wealth, and none were slaves, indentured servants, women, or men without property. He tell us of Shay's rebellion and its counter, the Riot Act, which allowed authorities to keep people in jail without trial, and of the defiance of Anne Hutchinson against the church fathers in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He tells us of New Jersey's rescinding of women's right to vote in 1807, of a "feminist" movement as early as the 1840's, and of the founding in 1821 of the Troy Female Seminary by Emma Willard. The author reminds us that the war of 1812 was a conflict waged for expansion into Florida, Canada, and Indian territories, that Congress deliberately and without hesitation appropriated money for war against the Seminoles, and that President Van Buren openly bragged to Congress about the forced removal of Cherokees from lands east of the Mississippi. He reminds us of the doctrine of "manifest destiny" and its justification of the brutal war against Mexico waged by President James Polk in the 1840's with the jingoistic assistance of the newspapers (no other course would be rational some of them reported), with Mexico losing half its territory in the 1848 treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. He reminds us of the Anti-Renter movement in the Hudson valley of New York, and that the Renssalaer family at one time ruled over eighty thousand tenants. He reminds us of Dorr's Rebellion in Rhode Island that attacked the idea, and its perpetrators, that only landowners could vote. So yes, there is much in this book that is fascinating and that is food for a hungry and inquisitive mind. It certainly goes against the mainstream view, and any teacher of history will probably come under fire from those who employ them if they decide to discuss the facts and analysis in this book. The history of the United States has been one of brutality mixed with brilliance, the former of which is emphasized in the pages of this book. A future treatise might emphasize the latter, and together they can give a more accurate picture of what the United States is, what it has been, and its future potential.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2006
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Davut Habip
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
An amazing book ...
Format: Paperback
An amazing book. Reading the book helped me understand why the US is experiencing difficulties in "perceived righteousness" today. I would recommend it to anyone who would like to change the World for the better. Howard Zinn is a benevolent hacker: the kind of hacker I would like my children to be, and why not: all children to be. For me, Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States hacks history and defines a problem and offers a solution: 1. The problem: a one-sided patriotic history enslaves the masses, 2. The solution: a bottom-up, humanistic history empowers everyone and opens the doors for future reconciliations among different communities.(1) At this critical juncture of human history both are relevant not only for the US but rather for our race. A one-sided patriotic bias in history: at what cost? 1. hides wrongdoings and the associated guilt, 2. serves as the first line of defense to deflect current & future criticisms for the past & current mistakes, 3. tampers data gathering, silences questioning & divergence of opinions, 4. reduces communication among communities, 5. defines “the patriotic” and increases the chances of populating the armed forces, 6. defines the other: “the unpatriotic,” 7. increases insecurities, 8. evokes fears (of retribution, etc.) 9. can be misused to justify violence against “the other,” 10. builds a common memory for the masses, builds their egos so that these egos can later be exploited, 11. allows the word “culture” to be used as an equivalence: American culture = being American; (2) 12. a politician can mix these facts to incite emotional reactions of the masses and eventually reach a higher number of votes in a predetermined direction, inexpensively, 13. at school, in the media, in speeches of politicians, and during different rituals (starting with reciting the pledge of allegiance and singing of the national anthem) the patriotic history is repeated and reinforced. Under these conditions, the masses learn to repeat what is given to them. They shun away from questioning further. Their concept of free-will is replaced by a misplaced trust. They learn not to deviate from the norm: they are enslaved and are not even aware of this enslavement. Many words lose their meaning: “a more perfect Union” “Justice” “secure the Blessings of Liberty,” “democracy.” A higher degree of cynicism and later a deep feeling of helplessness ensue. There are costs to the individual, the family, the society. Since many worldwide look up to the US morally, the use of one-sided patriotic history in the US produces world leaders who imitate bad examples. Consequently, Humanity pays dearly. A bottom-up, humanistic history empowers everyone: 1. can eliminate ignorance, 2. can eliminate convenient forgetfulness, 3. can eliminate arrogance, 4. improve self-esteem, communication, & understanding 5. can reduce violence, 6. can empower the individuals and the masses: psychologically and economically and thus improve the quality of life, 7. can help the path to sustainable peace. Among the different communities, the wounds are real. A one-sided history often does not address all of these wounds. Denial freezes any possibility of a reconciliation. A reconciliation process would pass through an acceptance of a historical wrong doing. In time, mankind may realize that what Howard Zinn has started may be the building blocks of sustainable peace. As a new year starts, I wish upon all of us: nations, creeds, ethnicities, etc. our very own Howard Zinns. (1) In the US, these communities can be whites, blacks, American Indians, Mexicans, WASPS, Catholics, Jews, Moslems, Chinese, Japanese, etc. In Turkey, where I am from, these communities include the seculars, non-seculars, Alevites, Armenians, Greeks, Jews, Kurds, etc. (2) Most of us are led to believe that “being” American/WASP/Jewish/Moslem/... is a “culture;” we almost always have these attributes thanks to coincidences; i.e. we are born into these “states;” how can a state that is largely a coincidence, be culture? I would suggest that only what is done through our free-will is deemed culture. Interestingly worldwide, the education systems, the media, and politicians use and propagate the word “culture” to imply largely a static state, rather than the result of a willful action.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2016
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Lyy
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Good quality
Format: School & Library Binding
Perfect!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2026
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Jovana
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Great book perfect for history lovers
Format: School & Library Binding
This book is perfect for people who love history in general. Very interesting topic in that it deserts why different cultures became more prominent than others over time. I’m still getting through it, but wanted to write a positive review because I’m enjoying it so much.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2024
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Bella
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 4
Makes you think!
Format: School & Library Binding
Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel is all about figuring out why some societies became super powerful while others didn’t. His main idea is that geography and the environment had a huge impact. Basically, places with good crops and animals to farm had an easier time growing and becoming stronger. The book mixes history, science, and geography in a way that’s pretty easy to follow, even though it covers a lot. Some people think Diamond focuses too much on geography and doesn’t consider enough other factors, but it definitely makes you think differently about history and why the world is the way it is today. It’s a really interesting read if you’re into learning about why things turned out the way they did.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2026

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