
Something to note is that often trees with longer growth time have larger log yields than those with shorter ones, but repeatedly planting shorter ones throughout a day gives a great deal. Someone who can only play for a few hours a day might be better planting trees with a one day growth time like a Fir, while someone who can log in more often may be better suited to trees with faster growth times. If you're aiming for efficiency (ie, chopping down your trees as soon as they're up to plant more), you want to make sure you take your next log in time into consideration when choosing saplings. Illegal farmers should log in or head to their trees 10 ~ 30 minutes early to camp and protect. This is something the efficiency-minded farmer and anyone planning on planting their trees on unprotected land need to keep in mind - but people plating on unprotected land especially need to think about when they will be available to cut down their trees. When will you be available to log in and harvest them? To further back that up, trees with gatherables provide few logs.Įven past your standard gatherable items found on crop trees are special items such as bark, hardwood, and pinecones, and so on. You wouldn't grow apple trees just to chop them down in real life, would you? The same applies here in ArcheAge. Most people grow trees for logs, which are an integral part of ArcheAge's economy but that's not all you can get from trees.Īs with real life, a fair number of trees are valuable not for their wood (logs), but what grows on them. Do you want logs or a particular fruit/leaf/berry? Those that are more difficult to see are less likely to be stolen by keen-eyed thieves. If you do not have a farm and instead are planting on unprotected land, you not only have to worry about size but also the color, height, and thickness of the trees themselves. You can check the bottom of the article for placement images, and the tree list below notes the sizes for all standard Sapling Vendor-purchased trees. There are four tree sizes, and there are ideal placements to get the most out of your farm. The size farm you are planning on planting is going to affect just how much you can grow - and which trees are ideal for you. What seems like an insignificant choice (which saplings to buy) actually affects your Labor Point, space, and ultimately time usage. These are all things you should ask yourself when investing in saplings. Are you trying to be Labor Point-efficient?.When will you be able to log in and harvest them?.Do you want logs or a particular fruit/leaf/berry?.

There are a few factors to bear in mind when clicking through the Sapling Vendor's wares:

You'll see the familiar 30 on your travels as well as some you've never seen at a Sapling Vendor, such as Sequoia and Yucca. Some may be better suited to your needs than others, and some are better for bearing fruit than chopping down.Įven beyond the 30 types of trees you can grow yourself are a number of wild-growing trees. There are a total of 30 varieties of tree you can plant on your farm (or atop a mountain), each one with its own combination of ideal climate, size, growth and harvest times, and yield.
