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#1
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We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our
house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. |
#2
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On 2009-05-29 11:25:19 +0100, "john royce" said:
We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. If it has root room, I'd suggest a eucalyptus of some sort. They grow quickly. Just how big is this water tank?! If you try to keep one tree and remove the other, won't the roots have become entangled, thus causing damage to the one you're hoping to keep? -- -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Exotic plants, shrubs & perennials South Devon |
#3
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![]() "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-29 11:25:19 +0100, "john royce" said: We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. If it has root room, I'd suggest a eucalyptus of some sort. They grow quickly. Just how big is this water tank?! If you try to keep one tree and remove the other, won't the roots have become entangled, thus causing damage to the one you're hoping to keep? Sacha Sacha thanks. The tank is a couple of feet long and a bit less wide. Actually we have several of these tanks and will use a tank for each tree. So its a eucalyptus for the quick growing cover tree and would you recommend another tree for its 'grace'. |
#4
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On 2009-05-30 16:37:26 +0100, "john royce" said:
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-29 11:25:19 +0100, "john royce" said: We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. If it has root room, I'd suggest a eucalyptus of some sort. They grow quickly. Just how big is this water tank?! If you try to keep one tree and remove the other, won't the roots have become entangled, thus causing damage to the one you're hoping to keep? Sacha Sacha thanks. The tank is a couple of feet long and a bit less wide. Actually we have several of these tanks and will use a tank for each tree. So its a eucalyptus for the quick growing cover tree and would you recommend another tree for its 'grace'. To be honest, I think those are too small for trees unless they're bonsai! When you consider growing a tree, a good rule of thumb (though not infallible) is that its roots will eventually spread as wide as its canopy. Is there nowhere in your garden that you could grow something that would suit you? -- -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Exotic plants, shrubs & perennials South Devon |
#5
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![]() "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-30 16:37:26 +0100, "john royce" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-29 11:25:19 +0100, "john royce" said: We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. If it has root room, I'd suggest a eucalyptus of some sort. They grow quickly. Just how big is this water tank?! If you try to keep one tree and remove the other, won't the roots have become entangled, thus causing damage to the one you're hoping to keep? Sacha Sacha thanks. The tank is a couple of feet long and a bit less wide. Actually we have several of these tanks and will use a tank for each tree. So its a eucalyptus for the quick growing cover tree and would you recommend another tree for its 'grace'. To be honest, I think those are too small for trees unless they're bonsai! When you consider growing a tree, a good rule of thumb (though not infallible) is that its roots will eventually spread as wide as its canopy. Is there nowhere in your garden that you could grow something that would suit you? -- -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Exotic plants, shrubs & perennials South Devon Mightn't a bamboo surfice for rapid cover? It would cope with the available space better. Must the graceful tree also live in a tank, or is this purely temporary? Some guidelines of what you want from the graceful tree would help. What sort of height, width of crown. Any specific season of interest? Evergreen or deciduous? Spider |
#6
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![]() "Spider" wrote in message ... "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-30 16:37:26 +0100, "john royce" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2009-05-29 11:25:19 +0100, "john royce" said: We have just cut down a two storey high pine tree that was too close to our house. The front garden now looks very bare. Can someone suggest a very fast and high growing evergreen tree to place in a plastic water storage tank (so as to prevent the roots causing any damage to the house) as a temporary replacement? Also can you recommend an evergreen tree to also place in the water tank, but with the emphasis on the gracefullness and look of it rather than its quick growing aspect? So when this has reached a reasonable size we can replaced the quick growing one with this tree. Thanks. If it has root room, I'd suggest a eucalyptus of some sort. They grow quickly. Just how big is this water tank?! If you try to keep one tree and remove the other, won't the roots have become entangled, thus causing damage to the one you're hoping to keep? Sacha Sacha thanks. The tank is a couple of feet long and a bit less wide. Actually we have several of these tanks and will use a tank for each tree. So its a eucalyptus for the quick growing cover tree and would you recommend another tree for its 'grace'. To be honest, I think those are too small for trees unless they're bonsai! When you consider growing a tree, a good rule of thumb (though not infallible) is that its roots will eventually spread as wide as its canopy. Is there nowhere in your garden that you could grow something that would suit you? -- -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Exotic plants, shrubs & perennials South Devon Mightn't a bamboo surfice for rapid cover? It would cope with the available space better. Must the graceful tree also live in a tank, or is this purely temporary? Some guidelines of what you want from the graceful tree would help. What sort of height, width of crown. Any specific season of interest? Evergreen or deciduous? Spider Thanks to all. Actually its really surprising how 'big' things can grow up to in quite small boxes. Especially if you manicure the roots a bit. |
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