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| New Shoots Get a helping hand with advice for novice gardeners... |
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| A previous owner of our house thought it would be a good idea to plant their Christmas trees into the back garden..... How wrong they were... When we moved in, they were both around 30ft tall, and very unstable in high winds. We got the tree surgeon in, who told us that you can't just cut the tops off this type of tree (unlike leylandii hedging), you basically have to just chop the whole thing down. So I would advise very strongly against planting it into the ground. I would imagine that keeping it in a pot would mean lots & lots of watering, and eventually it would run out of root space - my experience is that they are quite shallow rooted, but spread the roots much further than the tree canopy reaches. I wouldn't bank on being able to keep it going for a longer than a couple of seasons. Sorry if I seem like a killjoy, but if you imagine these trees in their proper habitat, trying to keep them in a suburban garden...??!!
__________________ Sarah “Tell me one last thing,” said Harry. “Is this real? Or has this been happening inside my head?” “Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should that mean that it is not real?” |
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| Try planting it in a root bag. This will effectively restrict its root ball and hence its size. They are used alot to grow specemin trees for replanting and also fruit trees to restrict their size or to enable them to be lifted at a later date.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
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| Thanks guys. I looked it up last nights and here it says that apparently you can grow them as hedging and keep individual trees as small as 3ft.. So i guess I'll plant it in the ground and keep pruning and see what comes out of it. Last edited by Alexx; 09-12-2007 at 09:12 PM. |
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