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Old 14-09-2004, 02:10 AM
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 23:21:01 GMT, TQuinn wrote:

On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 01:45:31 -0500, The Watcher transmitted this:

On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 05:14:04 GMT, TQuinn wrote:

On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 23:16:27 GMT, TQuinn transmitted this:

I take it the tree will die if I try to move it, and you don't have the heart to
tell me?


I've tranplanted mulberries bigger than that. It's quite some
work(especially here in the Ozarks), but it can be done. It would be
best to do it during the late winter/early spring, while it's dormant.
I transplanted one a couple of years ago, and it seems to be doing
fine. Of course, that might have something to do with the fact that I
planted it right beside my chicken coop, where the soil is very
fertile, and gets plenty of water. I've also transplanted other trees,
walnuts, oaks, black cherry, sycamores, dogwoods, redbuds, and a few
others on my property, but I've learned to try to get them when
they're smaller.


Good to hear, thanks. I was planning on starting to move it in
January/Feburary, is that good? (That's saying there won't be three feet of
snow on the ground, I'm in NY.) Also, would making a trench around the tree
help with the roots? I've done that with much smaller plants, and I'm not sure
if the same would apply to a tree.


It would probably help. I've done it sometimes. Usually I just dig up
the tree, trying to get as many of the roots as possible. The soil I
have here doesn't form a rootball very well, so I just let it fall
away from the roots and transplant the tree bare-root, watering it in
with plenty of good soil around the roots in the new spot.

Thanks again!


You're welcome.