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*Before purchasing the
plant, consider the site where you intend to plant. Is the area
usually dry, or does it seem to be a low area staying wet most of the time?
Will the plant be exposed to full sun or partial shade? For example,
roses prefer 6 hours of sunlight per day, whereas azaleas prefer a partially
shady exposure, such as a north or east side of the house. Is the soil
heavy clay, or loose and easily worked? How will the plant be used, as
a foundation plant, or for a screen etc.? Don't forget about the
mature height and width of the plant! Ask one of our horticulturalist
if you have any questions.
*Plant as soon as
possible, preferably the same day as the purchase. If this can't be
done, protect the root ball from sun and drying winds.
Keep the root ball moist by watering daily until
planting.
PLANTING PROCEDURES
1. Dig the hole 1½-
2 times wider than the root ball.
2. Add 1/3 sphagnum peat moss,
compost or well rotted manure to the soil that was removed from the hole.
Add bone meal to promote better root development. Mix the soil, peat
moss and bone meal together thoroughly.
Balled and Burlaped Plants
Set the plant in the hole. Natural burlap decomposes, therefore it can
be left around the root ball. Cut any twine that is wrapped around the
trunk of the plant. This can girdle and eventually kill the plant
PLANTS
IN PLASTIC CONTAINERS
Slide the plant out of
the container. Using a knife, make 5-7 vertical cuts,
½ inch deep,
into the ball. This loosens the root a prevents them from growing in a
circle. Place the plant in the hole.
BARE
ROOT PLANTS
Soak the roots in
water several hours before planting. Remove any broken roots.
Place soil in the bottom of the hole forming a cone shaped mound.
Spread the root out over the mound of soil. Fill the hole with the
prepared soil to cover the roots.
3. Place the plant in
the hole so the top of the ball is level with the existing soil surface.
Never plant deep; it is better to set the
plant a bit too high, for planting too deep can smother the plant's roots.
4. using the prepared
soil fill in around the root ball. After every 6 inches of soil, firm
the soil, but do not pack it. When the hole is half way filled up add
root stimulator and water. After fill to hole form a water basin at
the edge of the hole.
5. Water,
slowly and thoroughly! (Rule of Thumb: allow water to
run slowly on root ball for 6 minutes for every foot of plant height.
For example a 3 foot tall plant should be watered for 18 minutes.)
Continue to water once a week for the next two months. Reduce
waterings to every 10 to 14 day for the remainder of the growing season.
If it should rain, continue to watering unless the rain gauge measures
one full inch or more.
PLEASE NOTE: Watering rate and frequency varies an soil, plant type,
exposure and rainfall.
6. Use 'Fertilome"
root stimulator every-other watering, through-out the first growing season.
Root stimulator contains a rooting hormone, fertilizer and a soil penetrant,
all of which help reduce transplant shock.
7. Prune off any
damaged branches at this time.
8. Stake all tree that
have a trunk diameter of 1½
inches or more. Trees planted September through February should be
wrapped up to the first set of branches. Tree wrap reduces the chance
of the sun scalding tender bark. Remove tree wrap in late March.
Leave guy wires in place foe one full year. |