Black walnut has been felled indiscriminately for timber for everything
from fine furniture to rifle stocks. But few know that it is really an
extraordinary perennial oil-crop (as are most nut trees to varying
degrees). The author takes you on a journey into biomass nut production.
With the focus on his style of management, he examines the components of
volume output and the internal rate of return to investment in a
nut-based enterprise. Above all, the author suggests that the
reforestation of the landscape with non-select black walnut for biomass
nut production has the potential for sustainable multiple income streams
for long-term partial rural livelihoods. Operator of a farm with more
than 2,000 black walnut trees, the author uses his everyday interaction
with his 'forest' to draw out the experiences that shape productivity,
and provide ecosystem services in so doing.