| Home Page | Cultivar Recommendations | Contact Info. |
| Forkert |
| # Nuts / lb. | % Kernel | Kernel quality breakdown | Specific gravity | Harvest date | ||
| % Fancy | % Standard | % Amber | ||||
| 53 | 58 % | 39 % | 17 % | 2 % | 0.73 | Oct. 19 |
History'Forkert' is the result of a cross made by C.F. Forkert of Ocean Springs, Mississippi. The cross was supposedly 'Success' x 'Schley'. The parentage is uncertain, however, due to the fact that Mr. Forkert's records were destroyed and techniques for controlled pollinations had not been developed at the time the cross was made. One parent is most probably 'Schley'. Nuts from the cross were planted in 1913 and the 'Forkert' cultivar was eventually selected from the progeny (Sparks, 1992). Comments'Forkert' is obviously not a new cultivar, however, it is
perhaps underused in Georgia. 'Forkert' is not a precocious cultivar,
averaging only 4.3 lbs. of kernels per tree in years 1-10. However, as a
mature tree 'Forkert' produces well, averaging 23 lbs. of kernels per tree for
years 11-20. The outstanding feature of 'Forkert' is nut quality.
'Forkert' averaged 57.6%
kernel over all the years, with more than half of those rated as fancy.
'Forkert' is a large nut at 53 nuts/lb. with a rather bumpy but thin shell. 'Forkert' kernels are smooth, attractive, and shell out well. The biggest
Compare kernel yield of 'Forkert' to some other cultivars here.
|


| 'Forkert' production from the Ponder Variety Grove test. Each colored line represents the yearly production in pounds of nuts from an individual tree beginning the year planted. |
|
Alternate Bearing Intensity = 0.53 |