I’ve I’ve been trying to find a little time to get back into writing regularly. As I’ve always believed its better to do it right, and if you can’t than wait until you can. I’m trying to free up some time, and as summer progresses this will be more possible as this is the busiest time of year for us landscapers (too bad work gets in the way of having more time to do the things you really want to do – I’m hoping someday one of my hobbies will catch on and I can get paid to do one of the things I love to do with only myself as a boss).
The redwoods and Aesculus and Oaks and Laurels are doing wonderfully. I have recently finished installing the drip irrigation system to the whole crop. They are rooting and my success rate so far is about 90% – good considering hardwood cuttings are sometimes hard to root. Luckily for me I just have to weed, fertilize. Remember organic and ALWAYS with beneficial mycorhizzae like Dr. Earth or similar products NEVER Mirical Grow or any other chemical salt; build good soil organisms and you’ll fertilize less, worry about pests less, never worry about overfertilizing or fertilizing with the wrong fertilizer ratio, and get a much better tasting crop and flowers that bloom longer – duh! Taste and quality like people used to enjoy before the 1950′s and the ”chemical age”. Let me step down off the soap box for a minute.
If you are ever considering doing a project like this, I’ve learned a few things so far about what redwood cuttings initially seem to like:
1. Keep the newly planted cuttings in shade or filtered sunlight – like conditions they would naturally find under the canopy of a redwood grove. The more sun the more compact and stout as there is less distance between nodes; conversely more shade stretches the trees. A good balance of light is needed.
2. Use soil that is well drained. Any cutting will do better if the water can drain away from the plant’s crown (where stem meets root). Put some gravel in the bottom of pots before filling with soil as a way to get better drainage.
3. Mycorhizzae application will make trees grow at unbelieveable rates. As explained in an earlier blog, this “fungus root” material causes symbiosis between a small fungus and the root system, causing the roots to proliferate into thousands of miles of tiny roots, leaving more sites for potential nutrient uptake. The plant then will grow to accomodate the roots. (This is kind of backward since normally the top growth of the plant will dictate root growth). I cannot stress enough how much this stuff works. Available at any green friendly nursery and sometimes added to some types of organic fertilizers, put this on any plant and watch it thrive more than had it just been fertilize. I have redwood trees that I planted from 5 gallon size to 15 gallon size six months ago; by the end of this year the trees will be ready for 24″ boxes – unbelieveable!!!
4. Give them some form of gentle overhead water at least once a week. This simultates rain, and water that hits the soil from some overhead height will punch a bit of oxygen through with it into the soil (kinda like how the water is aerated near a waterfall in a stream, and fish gather there to get a little strength from oxygenation – do this to your roots).
5. Don’t “cull” or pull out cuttings that don’t seem to be doing that well – give them some love and be patient. I had a block of about 20 that I thought would die because I put them in a little to much sun too early and they burned and wilted – almost threw them out but instead gave them the love and now a month later 3/4 of them pulled through.
6. Be patient. They won’t do much of anything for a few months as they root, but as they slowly start to root you will notice new top growth in your redwoods.
I’ll be back soon and writing more often once this work thing chills a bit. In the meanwhile, happy gardening!
Plantman