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Old 04-05-2003, 02:32 AM
Christopher Green
 
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Default myth or fact? fertilizer to freshly transplanted tree

Archimedes Plutonium wrote in message ...
I have had the image for a long time that you never fertilize a freshly
transplanted
tree in that the tree has had so many roots severed that it needs no
fertilizer and
it would just "burn" the tree and do harm, even kill it.

But I wonder if that is more myth than fact. I wonder if a transplanted
tree would
appreciate a light sprinkle of fertilizer.

Anyone have experience with that.

Archimedes Plutonium,
whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots
of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies


About as much as you'd appreciate a banquet just after GI surgery....

The thing you don't want is too much nitrogen around the roots while
they recover. This will "burn" and kill off the fine feeder roots that
made it through the transplanting.

But a light, with the emphasis on light, fertilizing or mixing
slow-release fertilizers into the soil at transplanting will give the
tree a good start. This is also the best time to amend the soil with
good compost. Mulches are always a good thing, and they are more
helpful at transplanting than any other time.

In some areas, such as Southern California, this is the best way to
get P, K, and trace nutrients to the tree, because these don't travel
very well through our soil.

The conventional wisdom is never use any fertilizer intended for home
use at more than half the recommended strength. When transplanting,
it's safe and prudent to reduce that some more.

--
Chris Green