
11/11/13, 11:12 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: North-Central Ohio
Posts: 159
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I BOUGHT some acorn caps, LOL. Ebay! From Michigan. We want them for crafts at my job!
Danaus29, I've never seen a flying squirrel but that doesn't mean they are not about. I had the day off and heard the squirrel today. In my case I think it's a squirrel from the day shift.
The only explanation I've found relating to acorn crop is this, again from West Virginia:
Ryan chalked up the poor acorn crop this year to two things. First the derecho. Although the storm struck two summers ago, it’s important to consider red oak trees take 18 months to develop acorns. The crop which should be on this fall would have been vulnerable when the unusual storm tore through West Virginia. The white oak mast was impacted by heavy rains all spring and summer and to a lesser degree by the impact of Hurricane Sandy. West Virginians will remember Sandy struck here in the form of a very early snow storm and caused a lot of forest damage.
All is not lost for the West Virginia critters however. Where the oak was a bust, all other mast species seemed to soar in production this fall.
“We’re calling it basically the year of the beech,” Ryan said. “It’s the best beech year and the hickory is also tremendous. Good beech, good hickory, and good black cherry.” http://wvmetronews.com/2013/09/23/ma...bust-for-2013/
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