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Labette Pecan Tree

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Labette Pecan Tree

Labette Pecan (Carya illinoinensis 'Labette') opens up pecan growing to gardeners who thought they lived too far north. Developed in Labette County, Kansas, this cultivar stands among the hardiest pecans available, reliably producing crops where Zone 5 winters would kill standard varieties.

A True Northern Pecan

Most pecans hail from the deep South and struggle anywhere frost arrives early or lingers late. Labette breaks that pattern. Its Kansas origins mean it evolved with late spring freezes, early fall frosts, and genuine winter cold. The tree requires fewer heat units to mature its crop, making it the logical choice for growers in the Ohio Valley, lower Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic regions.

Nut Quality and Harvest

Labette produces medium-sized nuts with thin shells that crack cleanly. The kernels are plump with that rich, buttery pecan flavor that makes fresh-harvested nuts incomparably better than anything from a store shelf. Expect your first small crops within 6-8 years, with significant harvests beginning around year 10. A mature Labette can yield 50-100 pounds of nuts annually under good conditions.

Pollination Requirements

Labette is a Type I (protandrous) pecan, meaning its male flowers shed pollen before its female flowers become receptive. For the best nut set, plant a Type II (protogynous) variety nearby such as Major, Kanza, or Pawnee. Trees should be within 150 feet for reliable cross-pollination. Without a pollinator, you may still get some nuts through self-pollination, but yields will be significantly lower.

Landscape Presence

Beyond the harvest, Labette grows into a magnificent shade tree. The broad, spreading canopy reaches 40-70 feet tall and nearly as wide at maturity. Pinnately compound leaves create dappled shade and turn golden yellow in fall. The deeply furrowed bark and stately form make pecans among the most handsome native trees you can grow.

Wildlife Value

As a native North American species, pecans support a web of wildlife. Squirrels, blue jays, and crows compete for the nuts (invest in a good squirrel baffle if you want any harvest). The spring catkins feed early pollinators. Numerous moth and butterfly larvae feed on the foliage, which in turn supports songbird populations raising their young.

Labette Pecan rewards patient gardeners with decades of shade, beauty, and delicious harvests. For northern growers who dreamed of picking their own pecans, this Kansas-bred cultivar finally makes it possible.

$223.78
Labette Pecan Tree
$223.78

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Description

Labette Pecan (Carya illinoinensis 'Labette') opens up pecan growing to gardeners who thought they lived too far north. Developed in Labette County, Kansas, this cultivar stands among the hardiest pecans available, reliably producing crops where Zone 5 winters would kill standard varieties.

A True Northern Pecan

Most pecans hail from the deep South and struggle anywhere frost arrives early or lingers late. Labette breaks that pattern. Its Kansas origins mean it evolved with late spring freezes, early fall frosts, and genuine winter cold. The tree requires fewer heat units to mature its crop, making it the logical choice for growers in the Ohio Valley, lower Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic regions.

Nut Quality and Harvest

Labette produces medium-sized nuts with thin shells that crack cleanly. The kernels are plump with that rich, buttery pecan flavor that makes fresh-harvested nuts incomparably better than anything from a store shelf. Expect your first small crops within 6-8 years, with significant harvests beginning around year 10. A mature Labette can yield 50-100 pounds of nuts annually under good conditions.

Pollination Requirements

Labette is a Type I (protandrous) pecan, meaning its male flowers shed pollen before its female flowers become receptive. For the best nut set, plant a Type II (protogynous) variety nearby such as Major, Kanza, or Pawnee. Trees should be within 150 feet for reliable cross-pollination. Without a pollinator, you may still get some nuts through self-pollination, but yields will be significantly lower.

Landscape Presence

Beyond the harvest, Labette grows into a magnificent shade tree. The broad, spreading canopy reaches 40-70 feet tall and nearly as wide at maturity. Pinnately compound leaves create dappled shade and turn golden yellow in fall. The deeply furrowed bark and stately form make pecans among the most handsome native trees you can grow.

Wildlife Value

As a native North American species, pecans support a web of wildlife. Squirrels, blue jays, and crows compete for the nuts (invest in a good squirrel baffle if you want any harvest). The spring catkins feed early pollinators. Numerous moth and butterfly larvae feed on the foliage, which in turn supports songbird populations raising their young.

Labette Pecan rewards patient gardeners with decades of shade, beauty, and delicious harvests. For northern growers who dreamed of picking their own pecans, this Kansas-bred cultivar finally makes it possible.

Labette Pecan Tree | Nature Hills Nursery