Top 3 Ways To Multiply Profit From A Piece Of Land

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How can you outsmart traditional land owners and make a few times the profit they make from a piece of land? This video helps you find out!

By the way, the tree everyone seems to have a hard time hearing is "Paulownia".

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Wow didn't even consider me on your land...
I see how it is mate.

A_Goat
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One item you could add if the area permits is honeybees.

stevenmorris
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I'm living on a stud farm in France. We have one field with about 30 walnut trees. I remember when we first moved here there was only one tree doing very well whereas the rest were not in great shape. 14 years on and every single tree is a full happy healthy tree. Wise man say everything happen in circles...horse shite is a wonderful thing :)

dublinjuggler
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If you get a Paulownia tree, make sure it is sterile or one of the noninvasive varieties. That tree is invasive in the US. It is also known as the princess or empress tree. And Paulownia is the genus of many different species of the tree, so please do your research if anyone wants to get some.

PipersGrip
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Also be aware of juglone produced by black walnuts. Although it may not kill your plants under its canopy, it may hinder it growth. Depending on plants tolerance to juglone.

normandoughty
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The planting so close together as to prune and the mushroom area produced was a key piece of information I'd needed. Thanks

nandodando
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Although I´m a woodworker I never heard of the Paulownia tree before. I just looked it up and must say it really seems to have all the advantages. Fast growing, fast drying, light, hard and stable, fertilizing with nitrogen. Thanks for the suggestion.

kulturfreund
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I don't know how I came to this video but it was quite interesting.

TotalMishap
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I believe you may be mistaken about Paulownia fixing N...to my knowledge, it's not a legume...it also takes more than four years for the tree to reach maturity, although their rate of growth is prodigious....also, black walnuts secrete a substance from their roots which inhibits other vegetation (including other black walnuts) from growing in close proximity, so your stated spacing might not work in actual practice...
No, I'm not a troll, just someone who grew up on a farm in rural America, so I recognize certain inconsistencies that might slip past others on these subjects...English walnuts might work in this scheme, though....

chokkan
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It's not that we have a hard time hearing, its your accent. Thanks for putting the name of the tree in your description. PAULOWNIA....

dwaynepennel
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I like your video and have only one comment on what might not work. I bought some blue berry plants from a man with a ten acre blue berry farm about twenty years ago. Hi soil was very nice and all the same across the field so I thought it very curious that the plants went from six feet tall over most of the place down to about two feet tall in one area. I asked him why the small plants were so small.
He said it was because they caught some shade late in the day from the edge of the forest. I could then see the path of the shade across his field in the form of small plants. Blue berries require full sun and would not do well planted around trees.
I know this from personal experience also. The only plants I have that have done well get full sun.
I'm looking forward to checking out more of your videos.

kirkjohnson
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Finally, something to do with my shelter belt land. North Dakota, can't grow exactly everything listed but this has given me ideas in what to look for.

TheFrio
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Too bad I don't have any piece of land.

Strategiusz
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timber, grow timber (pine trees) they grow fast require little labor and you get three harvests at 10 (pulpwood), 20 (saw timber & pulp wood), & 30 yrs (saw timber and logs for poles), a logging company that you hire will do all the work to harvest the trees, and you get most of the profit. your timberland will create a haven for all types of wildlife and can be leased to hunt clubs. I also live on my timberland and enjoy the solitude, the peace and quiet, seclusion, and privacy. after the 3 rd harvest you replant and watch your investment grow

royhoco
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With the orchard, if you add sheep or cows, you can also add bees to pollinate them, then you also get yearly honey to sell and use.

kallistnemain
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Best video-no crap background noise to keep peoples ADHD attention! Great teaching on prospects! Thank you!

robinwilson-sauls
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Chickens also provide great nitrates for plants. They will kill off bugs such as army worms that can kill trees. So its not a bad idea.

TheHeadHunter
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Sheep and goats will overgraze an orchard and cause erosion. Goats will be practically *impossible* to keep from the crop. Cattle will stomp the roots, and reach up to pick the crop. Pigs (even though you didn't mention them) will uproot the trees ad turn the orchard into a desolate minefield. Chickens and turkeys will jump/fly up into the trees and eat the crop, and be particularly susceptible to predation in a hard to manage area like an orchard.

lookc
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I'm calling bullshit on walnut trees being harvested in 20 years. Buddy it takes many decades before you get good hardwood from a walnut tree. And the land has to be the right condition and type for them to grow.

normandoughty
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Ginseng is a high profit crop, true, and the roots might be big enough after 5 years but it grows best on north and east facing hillsides. Also when growing this valuable crop be advised that security from poachers is an important consideration.

josephdykes