Maintained by Cold Stream Farm, LLC with the intent of supplying a variety of informal information and photos on the trees and shrubs grown and sold by the nursery, along with various other topics such planting suggestions and wildlife habitat. Navigate by clicking the topics on the right, labeled 'Archive by Topic', or 'Archive by Month'. Cold Stream Farm supplies trees and shrubs which are grown as bare root seedlings and transplants and sold both wholesale and retail with no minimum order.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Ruffed Grouse Habitat

The importance of quaking aspen as feed and cover for ruffed grouse is well documented. Often overlooked are other important variables. Some years back talking with Gordon Gullion (regarded by many as our grouse wizzard), I told him that most years grouse paid no attention to the highbush cranberry hedge in our yard, but one year they fed there the better part of the winter. I asked him if he'd ever observed yearly changes in feeding preferences. His reply, "Absolutly, one year the grouse totally abandoned aspen buds." He wasn't sure why, but suspected high phenolic content in the aspen as the cause. I am pleased to see an article on this subject in the fall '08 issue of The Ruffed Grouse Society Magazine by Bob Chambers. In fall, when they have a choice grouse appear to dine on a wide variety of fare. It would seem logical that they would do the same if it was available in the winter. I don't think a grouse habitat manager could go wrong in planting a wide variety of winter feed species in high snow cover regions.

A few more words on feed for birds in general. Other birds show the same ambivalence toward highbush cranberry, and the fruit often goes unused, but not always. A couple years ago we had a late spring, heavy snow storm that stayed for several days. The birds came in great numbers and variety and consumed them all in a day, the juniper berries as well, that usually go unused. In the week that followed I found a dozen dead birds around our nursery, I suspect victims of starvation. When I dug stock during that snow cover, birds would show up immediately where I had brought up the earth. When I would return for more stock they would not readily fly off. A meadow lark did not, and I later found it dead.

Michael Hradel

Cold Stream Farm

www.coldstreamfarm.net

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Alder: Speckled

Speckled alder in the winter

Speckled alder seed bed

Friday, August 22, 2008

Pine: White (Pinus strobus)

Row of 6 year old white pine transplants 3'+

Row of 5 year old white pine transplants 2'+

Pine: White (Pinus strobus)

Row of 5 year old white pine transplants 2'+

Row of 2 year old white pine seedlings

Row of 2 year old white pine seedlings

Row of 5 year old white pine transplants 2'+ under snow cover

5 year old white pine transplants 2'+

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Friday, March 21, 2008

Spruce: Norway (Picea abies)

Spruce: Norway (Picea abies)
Norway spruce Picea abies. Transplants that have had 2 years growth. 10 foot centers, two rows staggered.

Spruce: Norway (Picea abies)

Norway spruce Picea abies. Transplants that have had 2 years growth. 10 foot centers, two rows staggered.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Hybrid Poplar

Hybrid Poplar: bag of 600 12-24'' trees. Graded and bundled in quantities of 25.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Spruce: Norway (Picea abies)

Bag of 30 2-3' tall 5 year old Norway Spruce transplants (Picea abies). Evergreens are packed in plastic bags with moist sawdust around the roots. Bags are tied tightly above the root and below the green.

2-3' tall 5 year old Norway Spruce transplants (Picea abies). Stock is graded from the top-most root to the tip of the tree.

2-3' tall 5 year old Norway Spruce transplants (Picea abies). Stock is graded from the top-most root to the tip of the tree.

Spruce: Colorado Blue (Picea pungens)

Bag of 50 18-24'' tall 5 year old Colorado Blue Spruce transplants (Picea pungens). Evergreens are packed in plastic bags with moist sawdust around the roots. Bags are tied tightly above the root and below the green.

18-24'' tall 5 year old Colorado Blue Spruce transplants (Picea pungens).

18-24'' tall 5 year old Colorado Blue Spruce transplants (Picea pungens).

Monday, February 11, 2008

Bayberry, Northern: Myrica pensylvanica

Bayberry, Northern: Myrica pensylvanica

northern bayberry, bayberry, candle-berry

Winter foliage, bayberry hold most of their leaves throughout winter, dropping them in late winter or early spring just before the new growth.



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <2315100244@messaging.nextel.com>
Date: Feb 11, 2008 3:01 PM
Subject: Feb11_0003
To: Coldstreamfarm@gmail.com


This is an MMS message. Please go to VIEW to view the message or REPLY to reply to the message.
© 2006 Sprint Nextel. All rights reserved
.

Bayberry: Northern (Myrica pensylvanica)

Bayberry, Northern: Myrica pensylvanica
northern bayberry, bayberry, candle-berry
Winter foliage, bayberry hold most of their leaves throughout winter, dropping them in late winter or early spring just before the new growth.



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <2315100244@messaging.nextel.com>
Date: Feb 11, 2008 3:11 PM
Subject: Feb11_0004
To: Coldstreamfarm@gmail.com


This is an MMS message. Please go to VIEW to view the message or REPLY to reply to the message.
© 2006 Sprint Nextel. All rights reserved
.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Monday, January 28, 2008

Pine: Red (Pinus resinosa)


Mature red pine stand. This acts as an excellent windbreak, as well as shade for parking along a portion of the nursery.