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The Rural Voice, 1998-05, Page 26Stretching up! Plastic tree shelters can take new hardwood tree plantations to new heights — like four feet of growth in just one year By Keith Roulston (with information from the Ministry of Natural Resources) The apple and walnut trees on Rae McIntyre's Shallow Lake - area farm have been growing for four years and weren't more than a foot or so high when he decided to experiment with Tubex tree shelters. By the end of the summer the trees were sticking out six inches above the top of the four -foot (1.2 metre) plastic tube. The plastic tree shelters are giving hardwood trees an early boost that can bring them to maturity several 22 THE RURAL VOICE Field trials by the Ministry of Natural Resources show tremendous growth rates for first year red oaks planted in Tubex (above left) and Tree Pro (above right) shelters. The shelters make it possible to plant hardwoods without nurse crops of evergreens. years earlier than if no shelter was used. Jim Faught, co-ordinator of the Grey County Forest Stewardship has experience with the shelters after taking part in five years of studies that show they may provide an alternative for establishitig hardwood plantations in open areas instead of using a nurse crop of evergreens. The tubes mimic what happens in a crowded forest situation, Faught says. In a forest the young tree is protected from wind and weed competition but has to stretch to get its share of available sunlight. - The tree shelters, made of translucent plastic, create a small greenhouse inside that traps carbon dioxide and moderates hot and cold temperatures. They also protect the trees from browsing rodents, insects and deer. Placed around the trees when they're planted, they also make it easy to locate the trees and reduce stress caused by transplanting. The tree guards have been used in Britain but only recently imported to Canada. Two companies, Tubex in Paris, Ontario and the Canadian Supplier of Tree Pro in Mississauga, supply the tubes in various lengths from .6 metres to 1.8 meters. Cost of a 1.5 metre shelter ranges from 54 to $4.75. McIntyre used 1.2 metre Tubex shelters last year on six walnut and four apple trees which had been showing little ambition to grow. "They worked extremely well," he says of the results. He feels the seedlings had established good root systems which enabled them to bolt ahead in their first season in the tree shelters. He's skeptical about the claims that transplants can grow 1.5 meters in their first year. But that's what the Ministry of Natural Resources has found trials at sites near Ridgetown, Cayuga, Midhurst, Picton and Prescott. A copy of Extension Notes, from the Ministry shows photographs of one- year -old red oak seedlings emerging from the top of Tree Pro and Tubex tubes. To make the most of the miraculous growth potential MNR makes several suggestions. Prepare the site by turning over the soil before planting, says the MNR Extension Note. It makes it easier to push the tree shelters into the soil. If planting in sod, MNR suggests using a herbicide to kill perennial weeds which might otherwise grow inside the tube. To reduce the shock of transplanting, tree shelters should be installed when the seedlings are planted. The Tubex shelter is a light brown tube with the top flared to avoid stem abrasion. They are shipped in groups of four, nestled together, each with a slightly