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Old 17-08-2007, 08:50 AM
Bosseye Bosseye is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2006
Posts: 7
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Thanks Travis,
The trees are at the edges of the land, and thankfully the edges that will only need about 1" of soil to make the plot level (as a tilth in which to seed). Rotovating was an issue I'd considered, and had planned to hoe the 6' around the trees by hand so as to avoid any root damage. Is this adequate, or is there something else I should know? Again, much thanks,
David.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis View Post
Bosseye wrote:
Thanks to all the posters so far - I'm rather amazed at the response!

Actually, I do have tree root structures in this ground, principally
three large oaks, and I would not wish to do anything do harm them.
Also three holly. Why - is there something important I'm missing
the trees?

br/David

symplastless;739317 Wrote:
Do you have trees with their root zones in this area?

--
Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Consulting Arborist
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep
reminding us
that we are not the boss.

"Bosseye" wrote in message
...-

Hi,
Have just (mechanically) cleared 0.25 acres of old and impenetrable
rododendron, and having removed the roots, will rotovate and overlay
with 6" of soil/sand/loam mix before laying a new lawn.

However, I'm expecting some potential problems:

First, I'm aware that the rhododendron is toxic to other plants, and
I'm trying to understand what may not be plantable in the reclaimed
land (ie. lawn, laurel, fruit trees etc). And also what might be
done
to neutralise this effect.

Second, I'm aware that there is likely to be rhododendron seeds left
in
the ground, which will doubtless sprout. Will glyphosate neutral
these,
or do I require something different, and will that be fine to seed
lawn
in mid September.

Any help appreciated.
Kind regards,
David.


It is probably not a good idea to be placing 6" of soil on top of any
tree roots much less rototilling them.

--

Travis in Shoreline Washington