Sunday afternoon trip to Saint Andrews Forest Farm

We were able to collect more male pollen to take to SAFF native old colony of clones. We also took compost tea made from our home bin and spread it around the old colony pawpaw patch. So, as Chris said, “we fertilized and we fertilized.”









Pollinating SAFF Old Colony Pawpaw Patch

We were able to hand pollinate the old colony pawpaw trees at the bottom of SAFF. Notably, this is the first time with novel dna so we hope they set fruit and stay put instead of dropping early as in prior years when we pollinated them from one tree to the next not knowing they were a very old clonal colony all arising from a large root system with identical dna.
It was raining lightly and getting cooler while over there in the forest. We also shored up the tiny house as the rain began and worked on construction of temporary stairs out of concrete blocks.



SAFF Tiny House Delivered



We met the designer and builders and Brian, the tow truck driver yesterday morning at 9:30 am in Troutville. It took us a while to get everything loaded up and ready for traveling to Buckingham County. We were nervous and excited. The most nerve racking part was whether or not it would fit under the train trestle with 13 feet and 4 inches of clearance stated on side.



It took two hours for us to drive to Buckingham. We went about 45 mph with the house. Once we got to the farm, it took about an hour to get it into its place. We are going to head back over today. We have to finish leveling it and shore it up against the weather.
SAFF Invasive Tree Removal

We spent the weekend taking down and processing the large paulownia trees up top in the main clearing. They loomed over the driveway and pad where we decided we’d place the tiny house. It felt like we were dismantling a giant whale carcass. These trees were messy, seedy and dropped limbs off during any storm. They take over native forests and choke out beneficial plants and trees for our Virginia wildlife. They were very fast growing as well which is why we put off cutting them down. They were a big bunch of hard work!






We stayed focused on creating our space for the tiny house for the most part, but ran down to the old colony pawpaw patch last night just before leaving SAFF for the weekend. The buds are still tightly closed. We are happy with the slow moving progress of the buds as we have only found female flowers out in the wild so far. We continue to look for the older male flowers with pollen. We will use this to pollinate our female flowers when they open. We are watching the pawpaws develop along the Rockfish River on our drive to the farm and we see them covered in buds. They are all still female with green flowers instead of more purple male flowers that face downward.



View of the clearing and pad without the paulownias.
SAFF Pawpaws, roads and a Tiny House

We drove over to Buckingham County yesterday to pick up soil test kits and drop off paperwork before heading to SAFF. Spring has sprung in many pockets of Virginia with purple flower buds emerging from red bud trees and bright yellow forsythia and daffodils blooming. After the deep cold snap, it appears we’ve made it and the weather will keep warming up from here.

On Wednesday, the day before, we drove backroads down through Lexington’s Maury River and Kerrs Creek Virginia. We drove further down through George Washington and Jefferson National Forest through creeks and hollers down to Troutville. It was beautiful and we kept our eyes open for pawpaws the whole way. We went to look at a tiny house that we’ve decided to buy and place at Saint Andrews Forest Farm so we can spend part of our time out there.


So yesterday we went over to SAFF and decided we would place it on our pad just off the driveway up top. We took down one invasive paulownia tree that would interfere with our plans. We have a few more trees to cut down to make a safe space for the tiny house.

Wednesday Trip to Edible Landscaping in Afton Virginia

We drove over late yesterday afternoon to check the status of their flowers on the Asimina triloba, pawpaw, trees at Edible Landscaping in Nelson County Virginia. This is one of our favorite places almost any time of year but it was especially enchanting yesterday. The flowers were blooming on many fruit trees and bees were buzzing hungrily. The pawpaws were just about to open on a few cultivars—namely the Sunflower, Shenandoah and Allegheny with some blooms starting to open and others (like ours in Buckingham County at SAFF) are still small and tightly closed for winter. While they are fully closed they can survive temperatures as low as -25 degrees Fahrenheit. Once they begin to open like the flower below, they are hardy to 28 degrees Fahrenheit. This makes them susceptible to late freezes.

When the flowers first open on one year old wood, they are in the female stage with a green, glossy stigma inside the petals. At this point, the stamen are immature, green and compact. After a few days, the petals turn wider and become more horizontal turning a deeper, purplish brown. The stigmas are no longer receptive and the anthers turn brown and release dry loose pollen. The pollen is light colored beige or yellowish and fine and dusty.

The Sunflower cultivar has been known to self pollinate. However most Asimina triloba need a second genetically distinct tree to set fruit. If successfully pollinated the green ovaries at the base of the flower begin to swell and develop into fruit. We’ve been staying on top of the weather. Hopeful to stay above 28 degrees wherever the flowers have opened. So far it appears Buckingham County will not drop below 28 degrees this season. Fingers crossed.
We got the new trailer yesterday. We are pleased with the look and feel of it. We will make good use of it at the farm. We plan to take it over tomorrow and begin transporting compost to the pawpaws.
SAFF Pre Spring Update

Yesterday, we visited Saint Andrews Forest Farm to work on our road project. We are bringing the road from the main driveway to the old farm road on the north side, in order to use the tractor to access the new Pawpaw orchard we’ve planted the past few years. We will need it for everything —bringing trees, compost, compost tea, water and collecting and taking mulch to the pawpaws. So far, we have carried everything in backpacks and our wheelbarrow. Phew! We have road access already with the tractor to the south end and the Old native SAFF orchard. We just ordered a trailer for the tractor that will hold up to 750 pounds. It will come tomorrow and we will get out there to use it to transport compost to the SAFF old native orchard at the bottom of the main hill. We’ve been wondering if this orchard was planted and farmed by Native Americans in the area. Or if it arose from just one tree and is made up of clones. Or both. The trees look old. They could be hundreds of years old. While individual root suckers only live around 40 years, the clonal root system can live for centuries. One reason the trees aren’t producing fruit may be because they are all clones of one mother tree. This is most likely. They need novel dna. So that’s why we started planting new pawpaw seedlings and cultivars. These older native trees at SAFF have flowered in mid April in 2024 and 2025. The first year we noted 15-20 flower buds. In 2025, we had fewer than that with the drought and none of these produced fruit. After we hand pollinated both years, we got fruit to set but they dropped within a month or so. This year every tree that’s over 6 feet tall has dormant winter flower buds all over them. Hundreds of hopeful fuzzy little round nodes everywhere. We are beyond thrilled. An unexpected surprise!



The 180-200 seeds we collected from pawpaws last summer (primarily from the Sunflower cultivar at Edible Landscaping in Afton, Virginia because the late frost that melted off the flowers at all of our other foraging spots) have stratified and we will pot those up in June to plant in the ground at SAFF in the Fall of this year. We are eyeing some of the local master gardening sales and the Hahn Horticultural Garden sales (April 9th) coming up this spring for more opportunities to collect seeds and trees. We plan to also collect pollen specimen from multiple locations around Virginia. We plan to visit Blandy Experimental Farm in Boyce, Virginia to see and collect Virginia pawpaw dna for our SAFF tree project. They have a Mother’s Day Plant Sale on May 9th and 10th. We have been using sammich baggies and qtips 😀 to gently collect dna from the open flowers at SAFF in the old native colony of pawpaws. Last year, and in 2024, we used our SAFF native flowers only to hand-pollinate the trees, but also this year we have our baggies and qtips with us now so we will stop and collect dna from any pawpaws we find with open flowers. We will help the pollinators out while collecting novel dna to bring to our old native SAFF colony. We’ve noticed a lot of bugs gnats and flies in the woods already. Especially down by the main waterway where the old native pawpaws are and the creek has water flowing. We’ve noticed our native colony is usually the last to open its flower buds each year down in its sheltered valley by the waterway. We stopped by Edible Landscaping in Afton Virginia yesterday and they had buds about to open. We will stop over there again this week to check their cultivars and select trees.
We added two Russian cultivars of pomegranates to our fruit tree population. A Salavatski and a Lyubimi. Both cold tolerant. We will see. The curse and blessing of living so near Edible Landscaping in Afton, Virginia. There are many wonderful nuts and fruit trees and shrubs!
We’d like to also begin adding Spicebush, jujube and gooseberry to the new Pawpaw orchard we planted with cultivars, select seedlings and some native fruit collected from Rockfish River locations along Howardsville Road. We will spread the American Hog Peanut that grows in our native SAFF pawpaw orchard into the new orchard. It is a nitrogen fixer and curls along the old pawpaws helping to keep them fed. We will bring their seeds to the new Pawpaw Orchard at the bottom of North Trail to encourage the companion plants continuing beneficial relationship. We are looking for littlebluestem grass-seed to spread in areas with erosion on the south end and set back line and in the clearings.
A Rainy Saturday at SAFF

We got an early start yesterday to spend a rainy morning and afternoon at St Andrews Forest Farm. We got interior shed work completed after a lovely walk. Being in the forest with the rain falling is especially calming.










Saturday at SAFF

We went over to SAFF on Saturday to take a walk and get some work done. We checked on the persimmons up top and found one ready to eat. Most are still hanging on until after the first frost —which is more than likely tonight as temperatures are supposed to drop to 25F overnight, and flurries are expected. Brrrr!
We spent the weekend winterizing the farm and the house. We brought some small black cherry twigs and sticks for getting fires started in the home fireplace. They are nice to burn.





