when i say do they mix i dont mean interbreed ...like the tallest broccoli in the world....what i mean is will things grow well under a poplar?
i know you cant grow under walnut trees but i wondered if there was an issue with poplars as well...i have (as you can see in my photos) a large poplar right in the middle of my plot...that and an other pretty unidentified (by me) tree are the only survivors of what was a small wood which we cleared to garden (before anyone says how could you? it was a piece of ploughed land when we bought it in 1991 the trees grew whilst we werent here cos we only managed a few weeks a year til we retired)and they were all false acacias which are weed trees anyway...
so i have things growing under the poplar and i think the soil is too dry and things arent growing as well as they might and the thing might have to go next winter....anyone know? anyone care? anyone there?
i know you cant grow under walnut trees but i wondered if there was an issue with poplars as well...i have (as you can see in my photos) a large poplar right in the middle of my plot...that and an other pretty unidentified (by me) tree are the only survivors of what was a small wood which we cleared to garden (before anyone says how could you? it was a piece of ploughed land when we bought it in 1991 the trees grew whilst we werent here cos we only managed a few weeks a year til we retired)and they were all false acacias which are weed trees anyway...
so i have things growing under the poplar and i think the soil is too dry and things arent growing as well as they might and the thing might have to go next winter....anyone know? anyone care? anyone there?
That's why they have such a bad reputation with surveyors, insurers (and some luckless homeowners) for causing subsidence in nearby houses in dry weather. Some insurance policies insist no poplars planted within 50m of a house; like willows, their roots are notorious for travelling a long way along drains etc.
That said, you might find that if you put down something like builder's damp proof membrane, maybe with a few piercings to let excessive water drain, then put a raised bed on top, you would still be able to keep enough moisture to grow salad crops. The problem is likely to be that any water draining down to the roots on a regular basis will encourage them to grow up to the source of the moisture.
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