1 oak
2 pine
3 fig
4 bartlet pear
5 pomegranate
6 cypress
7 dog wood
8 maple
9 pecan
10 wild cherry
2 pine
3 fig
4 bartlet pear
5 pomegranate
6 cypress
7 dog wood
8 maple
9 pecan
10 wild cherry
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Wow man!! If you had 11 and 12 more, your story would go right along with The 12 Days of Christmas!!!1 oak
2 pine
3 fig
4 bartlet pear
5 pomegranate
6 cypress
7 dog wood
8 maple
9 pecan
10 wild cherry
I feel you on the sweet gum. I've got three of them that I've just learned to live with.White oak, crape myrtle, ginko, elm, sweet gum( I cut down as many as I could afford)
Let me brag on my sweet gum . Yes. It's messy, but it saved my house in April when my neighborhood took a direct hit from a tornado. I heard it get hit when I was crouched in the hallway scared shitless. It lost a huge limb, but it stood. The tornado winds clocked at 140mph. I will never complain about it again.I feel you on the sweet gum. I've got three of them that I've just learned to live with.
Kumquat1 oak
2 pine
3 fig
4 bartlet pear
5 pomegranate
6 cypress
7 dog wood
8 maple
9 pecan
10 wild cherry
About 140,000 (primarily longleaf, some hybrid loblolly), and about 30 acres mix of hickory, gums, various oaks, wild dogwood, mock orange, persimmon, several hollys, ornamental cedars, eleven pecans, one pear, one crepe myrtle, probably forgetting some.160,000 at 400 per acre.
After living on our acreage for 3-4 years - I cut down 9 Sweet Gums, split them with a log splitter and ended up burning all the split wood the next two years. There's still Sweet Gums on the acreage but those are not so close to the house. Never have missed those trees I cut down (they were just too close to my house) but still enjoy the others - they're beautiful hardwoods.Pine
Oak
Dogwood
Maple
Elm
Japanese Maple
Hickory
Redbud
Fig
Wild cherry
Cedar
Sweet Gum
Edited to add Sweet Gum. We’re on 5.4ac. I’m sure I’m forgetting/missing something still.
Smart to cut down those sweet gums. They’re fairly soft and often don’t fair well in storms.After living on our acreage for 3-4 years - I cut down 9 Sweet Gums, split them with a log splitter and ended up burning all the split wood the next two years. There's still Sweet Gums on the acreage but those are not so close to the house. Never have missed those trees I cut down (they were just too close to my house) but still enjoy the others - they're beautiful hardwoods.
I think we have just about all those trees on your list, except the Japanese Maple and Fig. I hated to but had to cutup a Sugar Maple last week because it was damaged and had partially fallen. I cut it down to a point where young branches were - hoping it will make a comeback. I also have Sourwoods and Yellow Poplar (Tulip) trees that are not on your list.
It bothers me a lot where "rogue developers" cut down every single tree on their land in order to squeeze in every single housing unit.
I get a tax break from our acreage of timber.