Common name | Chinkapin oak, yellow chestnut oak |
Botanical Name | Quercus muehlenbergii |
Family | Fagaceae |
Plant Type | Tree |
Mature Size | 50 to 80 ft. tall, 50 to 70 ft. wide |
Sun Exposure | Full |
Soil Type | Loamy, sandy, clay, moist but well-drained |
Soil pH | Acidic, neutral, alkaline |
Hardiness Zones | 3-9 (USDA) |
Native Area | North America |
Chinkapin Oak Care
Here are the main care requirements for growing a chinkapin oak:
- Prefers full sun, although it can grow in some shade
- Can handle subzero temperatures and sunny summers
- Give regular water when young; will become more drought tolerant when established
- Needs well-draining soil; although it can grow on very dry, poor soil, it grows more shrubby in those conditions
- Does not need fertilizer
Light
Chinkapin oak needs full sun, at least 6 hours direct sunlight per day.
Soil
The tree can be grown in all soil types, but it prefers well-drained soil and a pH from weakly acidic to alkaline.
Water
Like all newly planted trees, in the absence of rain, a young or recently transplanted chinkapin oak must be watered at least weekly during the first growing season. Established chinkapin oak tolerates dry soil and does not need watering except in an extended drought.
Temperature and Humidity
The native habitat of the tree is a large geographical area as far north as New England and as far south as northeastern Mexico. It is highly adaptable to a wide range of climate conditions and can grow in locations with subzero winters and in hot, humid climates.
Fertilizer
Chinkapin oak can grow even in poor soils and needs no fertilization. Just because it is a hardy tree doesn’t mean you should neglect it. Occasional mulching can be helpful.
Types of Chinkapin Oak
Chinkapin oak is a member of the white oak group, including bur oak, white oak, and swamp white oak (swamp white oak and white oak are two different species).
There are no cultivars of chinkapin oak, but dwarf chinkapin oak or dwarf chestnut oak is a closely related native that is a different species (Quercus prinoides). It has growing conditions similar to chinkapin oak, with a similar leaf and fall color. It can be grown as a large shrub or small tree that reaches 12 to 25 ft. in height and 12 to 25 ft. in width.
How to Identify a Chinkapin Oak
Chinkapin oak is a native North American shade tree that grows from New England west to Minnesota and south to northern Mexico, with its name coming from native Algonquin, meaning “chestnut.” When young, the tree has a pyramidal shape that becomes broader and more rounded as the tree matures. It grows 50 to 80 feet tall and 50 to 70 feet wide.
Its leaves are thick, firm, light yellow-green above and paler green to silvery white on the underside. Chinkapin oak has distinctive flaky, gray-yellowish bark as it matures. Its tiny acorns are 34 inch to an inch long with a thin cap.
Uses of Chinkapin Oak
This hardwood tree is used for split-rail fences, railroad ties, and construction lumber. The sweet acorns from this tree are a valuable food source for squirrels, chipmunks, deer, turkey, and other birds.
Pruning
The tree does not require pruning except for removing crossing, broken, or diseased branches. Only prune while the tree is dormant and not during the growing season, as it stresses the tree and makes it more susceptible to oak wilt.
Propagating Chinkapin Oak
The best way to propagate chinkapin oak is to grow it from its seeds (acorns). The best time to plant acorns is immediately after they fall in autumn.
How to Grow Chinkapin Oak From Seed
To successfully grow chinkapin oak from acorns, collect them immediately after they drop.
- Place them in a bowl of cold water; viable seeds will sink to the bottom, while those with low viability will float. Discard those and plant the viable acorns immediately to achieve optimum germination rate. If you store the acorns over the winter, the germination rate can drop from over 90% to less than 50%.
- Plant the acorns sideways, 34 to 1 inch deep, in pots first or directly in their permanent location.
- Give them at least 1 inch of water weekly if it doesn’t rain.
- Cover the soil with 2 to 3 inches of mulch or straw to help suppress weeds and protect the seedlings against frost heave.
- The acorns will soon start germinating; growth will stop during cold weather and restart in the spring.
- Be careful when pulling weeds so you don’t uproot the tender seedlings.
Overwintering
Chinkapin oaks are cold-hardy trees that can tolerate freezing temperatures. Protect young saplings growing outside in containers or newly transplanted outdoors with a layer of mulch or straw over the root zone.
Common Pests & Plant Diseases
As a native tree, chinkapin oak is relatively resistant to insects and diseases. But when the tree is under stress, such as from too much or too little water, soggy or compacted soil, or road salt, it can be affected by disease.
One of the most damaging is the fungus oak wilt, which kills the tree in a few years. Its other susceptible conditions include cankers, shoestring root rot, anthracnose, and leaf blister.
An infestation with gypsy moth, orange-striped oakworm, and the variable oakleaf caterpillar can defoliate the tree.
Common Problems With Chinkapin Oak
Chinkakpin oak is a low-maintenance, easy-to-grow tree; the only finicky part is transplanting it successfully.
Young Tree Failing to Thrive
The tree has a deep root system with a taproot, and when it’s sold as a balled and burlapped tree at a nursery, a significant portion of the root system might be missing. When buying a chinkapin oak, inquire whether it has been root-pruned, which gives the tree a much better chance of survival.
Splits or Cracks in Bark
The bark holds water. With sudden weather fluctuation and sudden shrinking and swelling of bark caused by sunscald, the bark can split, create crevices, or flake off. If your tree gets recurrent sunscald, protect the tree with a white tree wrap in the fall before freezing temperatures to reflect sunlight and keep the bark temperature cooler.