Yes walnut trees will grow in New Hampshire. I presently have about 10 black walnut trees and the hundreds and hundreds of walnuts with green husks around them are evidence of this. My trees range in age from about 40 years plus for a couple to 20 years for the rest. I have had many people question and doubt that my trees are actually walnut trees until they see them. I have owned my home on the Seacoast of New Hampshire for over 12 years and this is the first year I actually plan on harvesting any of them. Hope this helps.
I live in New Hampshire. We have birch trees, weeping willows, evergreens, maple trees, oak trees, beech trees, and more. (:
Ash, birch, cherry, dogwood, elm, Fir, gum, hickory, oak, pine, sycamore, walnut, willow,
The black walnut is like the other nut trees in that the nuts are the reproductive "unit" the tree grows and drops. Plant a black walnut, and (if conditions are acceptable) a new tree will sprout and grow. If the nut can roll away from the parent tree a bit, it will have more room to grow. And if an animal helps with a bit of transportation to improve dispersion, so much the better.
New Hampshire Trees:ArborvitaeAshBasswoodBeechBirchCherryChestnutDogwoodElmFirGumHackberryHawthornHemlockHickoryHobohornbeamHornbeamJuniperLarchMapleMountain AshOakPinePoplarSassafrasServiceberrySpruceSumacSycamoreViburnumWalnutWhite CedarWillow andWitch-hazel.Others exist today but they are not native to New Hampshire.
Yes, hurricanes do sometimes hit New Hampshire.
many
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New Hampshire grows watermelon, not cranberries. This is a common misconception. They also grow corn and hay as well as the 120,000 gallons of maple syrup produced there.
Im not sure because there is a species of palm called the windmill palm that will thrive in colder areas such as New Hampshire
No. Yews do not grow in New Zealand.