Uploader Comments (growingwisdom)
Top Comments
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1 ) Buy tree
2 ) Dig hole
3 ) Put tree in hole
4 ) Bury roots
5 ) Water
boom done
All Comments (10)
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A thorough yet concise overview of how to plant something outside. This goes along very closely with what I was taught, too. Great refresher, thanks!
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nothing wrong with this video. we all vary a little in the way we do things. I believe getting rid of the burlap is an advantage for the roots though. the first couple of years of root development can be criticle so any restrictions can be bad. hard to go wrong with a 50/50 mix either. Cross reference everything you see with other videos and you shouldn't go wrong.
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always leave the burlap on. there is no need to inspect the lower root system, the only root problem would be a gurdel root and that would be at the top. I belive that a 50/50 mix is always best for a backfill, but he was planting a rhodo so its justifiable with all the fungi they are subject to. The espoma brand fertilizer he uses is great for transplanting. Now they carry a Bio-Tone specificly for new planting.
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win
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i wish it were so easy, but there's a ton of smaller more important steps in between.
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Growingwisdom: I don't quite understand why triple (super) phosphate ought to be the ONLY fertilizer used in transplating. I always use a 5-15-5 mix with a root stimulator and it works great, never burns. So, you can still add a fert. that has low N and K.
One more question. Why does my city put 12 inches of mulch around their trees? Is this a tactic for watering less often?
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2:30: The burlap should always be taken off. It allows you to inspect the rootball for damaged or problematic roots that can be corrected before the shrub/tree is planted. Not all plants B&B'd have just been dug from the field. Sometimes there are wire baskets that are intact as well that need to be removed.
There are always evolving opinions on how to plant trees and shrubs. I try to take the most widely accepted techniques when doing a video and then add in some of my own experience. Dave
growingwisdom 10 months ago
Arayan. Normally, mix 1/2 the soil you pulled out with new soil. Then the plant has time to get use to the existing soil with some really good stuff. In this example the soil was horrible. I might have said if the soil is really bad choose an new site or dig a hole 3 or 4 times as wide and ammend the soil with some native left. Good point on your part. Thanks!
growingwisdom 4 years ago