Last year (2016) I got no black walnuts. North Georgia had a severe drought in the late summer and early fall; although I had some nuts on the trees in July, by the end of August they had all aborted.
This year was different. A lot of nuts were downed in early September by Irma. As I mentioned in September, I went ahead and cracked some of them right away to see if they were okay and they were. Lesson learned, however: The nuts had not cured. I left the container of nuts shown in the Irma post out at room temperature to see what would happen, and after a week or so the nut meats molded.
I didn't go back for the rest of the Irma walnuts because (as noted previously) it was a total pain trying to remove the husks. It probably took 30-60 seconds of hammering to get them off each nut.

It takes me about an hour to process five gallons. I have gotten better at it, but it's still labor intensive. First I knocked off the hulls with a hammer. The fully ripe ones were much easier to de-husk. I had some husk fly larvae but not many; perhaps last year's failed crop cut down on the population some. Then I swirled them in water in a bucket, using both the water stream out of the faucet and the nuts themselves to remove remaining husk. I did about three or four rinses, ending up with what you see here. That's about clean enough, though I have seen cleaner shells. People pressure wash them or do many more rinsing cycles to get them cleaner. They don't have to be works of art.
I haven't cracked these yet--that's actually the most labor-intensive step in processing--but they are ready to go. They'll be good in the shell for a year or two.
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