Almonds and pecans are both pretty thirsty nuts. Almonds need about 1.1–1.3 gallons of water per nut, while pecans use roughly 1.0–1.5 gallons each. So on a per-nut basis, pecans don’t necessarily save much water.

The key difference is where they’re grown. Almonds are almost entirely produced in drought-prone California, where water is already scarce, while pecans are mainly grown in the southeastern U.S., like Georgia and Texas, where there’s more natural rainfall and less irrigation stress.

Pecans have a less intense water footprint overall. The hellacious juniper-cedar trees (like Ashe juniper in Texas), you’re right, they’re pollen bombs in winter and massive groundwater hogs. They’re not farmed like nuts, but they definitely absorb water and crowd out native plants, so they’re a different kind of ecological headache.

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I didn't know pecans are so thirsty! My neighbor has two papershell pecan trees in his yard. But we do get rain here so I suppose it would be much less noticable. I detest those "mountain cedar pollen" producing demons cause "cedar fever" is REAL jan-march in north Texas.

I believe it!

I was surprised too. Pecans grow very well in the highly arid southwest.

thirsty nuts lol

Durrrrsttyyy

Are you still chillin with those 8 jars?!