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#1
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Root ball question
I just purchased a 7 foot coral bark maple. It had a small root ball..about
15 inches in diameter and 8 inches deep. When I was planting the tree, first the twine broke and then the burlap fell off. I noticed that the tree had very lttle root system and was mostly in a heavy clay soil. I removed the crap soil and planted the minimal root system in good soil. I was surprised to find this tree with such a minimal root system. Normally I don't even look when I plant balled plants. My question is: Has this tree been "butchered" when the grower removed it from the ground and then tried to cover up the problem with a large root ball? Is it likely that the tree will survive? It doesn't look bad at all at this point, but with such a little root system is there any chance it might survive? Is this type of root ball typical from growers? Email: -- Richard S. Levine |
#2
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Root ball question
it all depends where you bought it and what kind of guarantee it had.
fast growing trees can be 7 feet tall and not have much in the way of branching... it can be shipped bare root, planted and do great. if it looks like a stick even a leafed out stick, it is most likely going to be fine. garden centers buy many plants bare root, pot them up (or in burlap) and they are sold before they develop good roots. you want to help the tree along, get anti-dessicant like cloud cover. spray that once every couple of weeks and of course keep the tree well watered. if that tree didnt sell at the garden center it is easier to carry a burlaped tree over winter. they set them in rows and mulch them. then when they sell them the following year there is no need to disturb the root ball when planting. clay is not crap soil. it holds an incredible amount of water and prevents the fine roots from drying out. I hope you rinsed the clay off ... otherwise you may have broken some of the fine hair roots that actually take up water. Ingrid "clipster" wrote: I just purchased a 7 foot coral bark maple. It had a small root ball..about 15 inches in diameter and 8 inches deep. When I was planting the tree, first the twine broke and then the burlap fell off. I noticed that the tree had very lttle root system and was mostly in a heavy clay soil. I removed the crap soil and planted the minimal root system in good soil. I was surprised to find this tree with such a minimal root system. Normally I don't even look when I plant balled plants. My question is: Has this tree been "butchered" when the grower removed it from the ground and then tried to cover up the problem with a large root ball? Is it likely that the tree will survive? It doesn't look bad at all at this point, but with such a little root system is there any chance it might survive? Is this type of root ball typical from growers? Email: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#3
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Root ball question
clipster wrote: I just purchased a 7 foot coral bark maple. It had a small root ball..about 15 inches in diameter and 8 inches deep. When I was planting the tree, first the twine broke and then the burlap fell off. I noticed that the tree had very lttle root system and was mostly in a heavy clay soil. I removed the crap soil and planted the minimal root system in good soil. I was surprised to find this tree with such a minimal root system. Normally I don't even look when I plant balled plants. My question is: Has this tree been "butchered" when the grower removed it from the ground and then tried to cover up the problem with a large root ball? Is it likely that the tree will survive? It doesn't look bad at all at this point, but with such a little root system is there any chance it might survive? Is this type of root ball typical from growers? What you describe is perfectly normal for trees sold balled and burlapped. They are typically grown in heavy clay soil for a number of reasons - they are easier to harvest, clay soil contains a lot of nutrients and is moisture retentive, and if the tree is properly cared for after harvest, that heavy clay protects the root ball from damage. Root systems resulting from this type of process tend to be smaller at planting time (as you noticed), but if obained from a quality grower, usually are quite healthy and will take off quickly. Larger Japanese maples are often sold this way or in large wooden boxes, seldom ever by bare root. J. maples in particular are extremely sensitive to root disturbance - you may have done it a serious disservice by removing the clay. In the future, if you plant B&B trees or shrubs, leave the clay rootball intact. Place the rootball - burlap and any ties in place - in the planting hole, site the tree according to your preferences and then, gently remove all the ties and fold back the burlap from the top and sides of the rootball making sure the clay is undisturbed. Backfill and water in well. For your maple, you might want to consider applying a transplant solution or other root growth stimulator to counter the effects of the disturbance. Be sure to pay close attention to watering but don't over do it. Japanese maples are very susceptible to root pathogens - the damage to the root ball combined with overwatering could prove fatal. pam - gardengal |
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