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Old 24-07-2003, 02:43 AM
Jim Lewis
 
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Default [IBC] PJM Rhododendron roots

Hi all,

I have purchased a Rhododendron and it was apparently

planted in peat
moss. When removed from the pot I have a perfectly shaped

replica of the
pot. A solid mass of root fibers. Do I hack and slash to get

the shape I
want? I have removed about 1/3 of the mass and there is no

difference
farther in.

It came in a 3 gallon nursey pot. From soil surface to top

approximately
18 inches. Spread about the same. Trunk about 1 & 1/4 inches at

the base.
After removal of some of the root mass I soaked it a bucket of

water to
make sure the peat moss was wetted again.

How do I approach this?

Thanks in advance,
Harry in Iowa


Maybe, in Iowa, it won't be too late in the year to have done so
much root chopping on a Rhododendron. They're quite forgiving,
and can be worked on after the blooming period is over, so let's
hope.

I would wash out ALL of the peat -- if it IS peat. You may find
that most of the "peat" is actually roots. Rhododendron grow
masses of very, very fine roots. If it is peat, wash it
thoroughly. Quite a bit of root may wash away during this
process.

Replant in a shallow, wide pot (bulb pots are nice) -- maybe
twice as wide as deep. Use a coarse, fast-draining soil, with a
considerable amount of rich organic material in it (for acidity).
Coarse, home-made manure compost is nice. Be certain that you
get the soil thoroughly mixed into the root ball, leaving no air
pockets. For the first watering or two, you can submerge the pot
OVER the rim and keep it there till all bubbles stop. Subsequent
watering should be a sprinkle from the top. You probably should
trim a bit off the top, too, but it isn't absolutely necessary
unless most of the roots washed off the plant.

For the remainder of the summer, keep the plant where it gets
morning sun and afternoon shade. Never let it dry out (but don't
let it get soggy). Fertilize every 2 weeks with an acid
fertilizer (Miracle Gro 20-20-20 or Miracid is fine).

Good luck.

Jim Lewis - - Tallahassee, FL - The phrase
'sustainable growth' is an oxymoron. - Stephen Viederman

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