I love to take the seed heads and make sun tea (starting with cold water in a clear glass jar) on really sunny summer days....can also add some sage or rosehips
Sumac suckers profusely creating thickets, so it needs a lot of room to spread. There’s a smaller shrub (Rhus trilobata) aka lemonade sumac which is more common out west. It withstands poor conditions & is ok with little water. Its berries are edible just like those of staghorn & its leaves in fall turn beautiful colors. You might ask about that one at your garden center. Hope this helps.
How lucky you are to have pecan trees--they don't grow up this far -we have hickories.
The sumac featured in my video, the staghorn (Rhus typhina), grows wild all over the northeast. It’s the predominant sumac in my home state of Massachusetts. It supposedly can grow in a zone 8 area but I’m not familiar with south Texas enough to know if it’s as common there as it is here. I’ve never had to plant one because they’re so plentiful. I’d check with a garden center in your area. Be sure to get a female plant ‘cause it’s the one with the seeds.
Thnk you! I love your VIdeos. One question... I Live in south Texas and I have a fence line that I am wanting to grow something along. my entier yard is shaded by pecan trees but my neighbors yards have no trees so i get "side light". Would those work in my area zone 8 and cant hey be purchased at an nursery or will i have to get it at a see exchange? ty
--Thanx for the support. Do you live down south? I looked at some of your films on your site & several of the plants you covered I recently saw on a trip to Florida.
I love to take the seed heads and make sun tea (starting with cold water in a clear glass jar) on really sunny summer days....can also add some sage or rosehips
perambulatin 5 months ago
Thank you so much--it's good to know that my films are appreciated.
thederb720 1 year ago
Love your videos!
spinnerky2 1 year ago
Answer Part two:
Sumac suckers profusely creating thickets, so it needs a lot of room to spread. There’s a smaller shrub (Rhus trilobata) aka lemonade sumac which is more common out west. It withstands poor conditions & is ok with little water. Its berries are edible just like those of staghorn & its leaves in fall turn beautiful colors. You might ask about that one at your garden center. Hope this helps.
How lucky you are to have pecan trees--they don't grow up this far -we have hickories.
thederb720 1 year ago
Answer Part one:
The sumac featured in my video, the staghorn (Rhus typhina), grows wild all over the northeast. It’s the predominant sumac in my home state of Massachusetts. It supposedly can grow in a zone 8 area but I’m not familiar with south Texas enough to know if it’s as common there as it is here. I’ve never had to plant one because they’re so plentiful. I’d check with a garden center in your area. Be sure to get a female plant ‘cause it’s the one with the seeds.
thederb720 1 year ago
Thnk you! I love your VIdeos. One question... I Live in south Texas and I have a fence line that I am wanting to grow something along. my entier yard is shaded by pecan trees but my neighbors yards have no trees so i get "side light". Would those work in my area zone 8 and cant hey be purchased at an nursery or will i have to get it at a see exchange? ty
911no 1 year ago
--Thanx for the support. Do you live down south? I looked at some of your films on your site & several of the plants you covered I recently saw on a trip to Florida.
thederb720 1 year ago
Great video, we have a different kind of sumac but used the same way
NoTraceSurvival 1 year ago