Five Need To Know Recommendations When Transplanting Your Tree That Can Keep It From Dying
This can make the newly transplanted specimen tree virtually guaranteed to live and it is going to look great year after year and prosper with your landscape. These points are something you should read before you let your landscaper, garden center, or tree nursery sell you anything.
1) Never plant the tree to deep. Trees need oxygen just as you or I do, after you pile extra dirt on top of the roots you will be lowering the amount of oxygen which can go to the roots. Some trees tend to be sensitive to this than others; Maple trees are awfully sensitive to being planted to deep. It is usually better to plant several inches above ground level and mulch around it.
2) Never pile mulch or dirt around the trunk. Some parts of the tree are designed to stay beneath the ground and certain elements are intended to be above ground. When you pile a bundle of mulch or dirt all around the trunk you are putting a part of the tree that was designed to be above ground, below ground. This will induce the trunk to rot and your freshly transplanted tree to perish. Mulch close to the tree but leave about one inch separation between the trunk and the beginning of the mulch
3) You shouldn’t let the rabbits kill your tree. Rabbits are almost always my arch enemy when it comes to trees. In the winter, when they get hungry and there is next to nothing to eat they will resort to consuming the bark off your tree. They will eat a nice ring all the way around your tree, killing your specimen tree every time. Nurseries, Garden Centers, Tree Farms and Landscapers, will not warranty a tree that has animal damage. Put a piece of corrugated pipe around the bottom of the tree for the winter to keep the critters away.
4) Obtain some root stimulator with Mycorrhizal Fungus inside it. This fungus thrives in forests where there is a true underground ecosystem. The fungus attaches to the roots and produces nutritional value and moisture to the tree. There is a symbiotic connection between the roots and the fungus. When you grow a new tree there is not any of this fungus in the ground simply because the fungus would need to be affixed to the roots of a tree for it to exist. The bottom line without getting in too much detail is, get it, it works! Use it in the spring for optimum out come. You can use this on your plants as well; give your whole landscape a little help for the season.
5) An excessive amount of water will kill your tree just as easily as too little water. There is no hard and fast rule on how much to water, nonetheless, you cannot afford not to water your tree wrongly. This is the number one reason new trees die.
Discover more relevant to transplanting trees at the Milwaukee garden center website.
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