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#1
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Moving Bamboo
W just recently sold our house in Portland OR. Although everyone told
us we should remove the bamboo grove I have ben tending in the back yard prior to putting the house on the market because it would scare prospective buyers off, we did not, and it became one of the house's hottest selling points. I put a clause in the contract that I could claim a couple of samples from the bamboo grove for our new place and a couple of weeks ago, we went over and dug some up. Due to some nice new rhizomes in a slightly rasied area and some nice soft soil, we got a nice stand of Phyllostachys aurea, about an inch thick and several mature stalks of Phyllostachys dulcis about two inches thick, along with sizable root balls. We also ended up taking two large and seemingly vibrant root balls of the dulcis with no stalks. Originally we planned on cutting the plants back to about eight feet for transport, but at the last moment we decided to throw caution to the winds and take the plants in their entirity. The trip lasted about ten minutes and the plants were back in the ground within an hour. Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot |
#2
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Moving Bamboo
ems wrote:
Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot I normally remove about half of the branches so the roots do not have to support as many leaves. You could also strip some of the leaves off. Bill |
#3
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Moving Bamboo
I've done something similar with the same initial results. I did cut back
all but the last 2' or so of each plant. After about three weeks I got new leaf growth and a few weeks later a couple of new shoots. Also, Kanapaha Botanical Gardens did the same thing at their yearly plant sale, keeping the dug-out bamboo rhizomes in a plastic bag and cutting back the stalks. These plants stayed out of the ground for days before the buyers replanted. Their advice -- don't let the plants dry out, but without keeping the ground soggy. The above-ground stalks won't live, but the following year you'll get new shoots and the clump will double in size each year thereafter. The existing stalks -- dead above ground -- are essentially markers so that you know where the bamboo was planted, until new shoots occur. All of the plants we got from KBG have done remarkably well, and after five years we have groves of numerous types. As long as you don't let the transplanted bamboo dry out, you should see new leaf growth in a few weeks, and a few new shoots next year. In three years you should have a fully established grove. Regards -- "ems" wrote in message . .. W just recently sold our house in Portland OR. Although everyone told us we should remove the bamboo grove I have ben tending in the back yard prior to putting the house on the market because it would scare prospective buyers off, we did not, and it became one of the house's hottest selling points. I put a clause in the contract that I could claim a couple of samples from the bamboo grove for our new place and a couple of weeks ago, we went over and dug some up. Due to some nice new rhizomes in a slightly rasied area and some nice soft soil, we got a nice stand of Phyllostachys aurea, about an inch thick and several mature stalks of Phyllostachys dulcis about two inches thick, along with sizable root balls. We also ended up taking two large and seemingly vibrant root balls of the dulcis with no stalks. Originally we planned on cutting the plants back to about eight feet for transport, but at the last moment we decided to throw caution to the winds and take the plants in their entirity. The trip lasted about ten minutes and the plants were back in the ground within an hour. Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot |
#4
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Moving Bamboo
That means:
Cut back to 2-3 feet. This will help them establish. Those without clums have good chances too. Tihomir "JimR" wrote in message k.net... I've done something similar with the same initial results. I did cut back all but the last 2' or so of each plant. After about three weeks I got new leaf growth and a few weeks later a couple of new shoots. Also, Kanapaha Botanical Gardens did the same thing at their yearly plant sale, keeping the dug-out bamboo rhizomes in a plastic bag and cutting back the stalks. These plants stayed out of the ground for days before the buyers replanted. Their advice -- don't let the plants dry out, but without keeping the ground soggy. The above-ground stalks won't live, but the following year you'll get new shoots and the clump will double in size each year thereafter. The existing stalks -- dead above ground -- are essentially markers so that you know where the bamboo was planted, until new shoots occur. All of the plants we got from KBG have done remarkably well, and after five years we have groves of numerous types. As long as you don't let the transplanted bamboo dry out, you should see new leaf growth in a few weeks, and a few new shoots next year. In three years you should have a fully established grove. Regards -- "ems" wrote in message . .. W just recently sold our house in Portland OR. Although everyone told us we should remove the bamboo grove I have ben tending in the back yard prior to putting the house on the market because it would scare prospective buyers off, we did not, and it became one of the house's hottest selling points. I put a clause in the contract that I could claim a couple of samples from the bamboo grove for our new place and a couple of weeks ago, we went over and dug some up. Due to some nice new rhizomes in a slightly rasied area and some nice soft soil, we got a nice stand of Phyllostachys aurea, about an inch thick and several mature stalks of Phyllostachys dulcis about two inches thick, along with sizable root balls. We also ended up taking two large and seemingly vibrant root balls of the dulcis with no stalks. Originally we planned on cutting the plants back to about eight feet for transport, but at the last moment we decided to throw caution to the winds and take the plants in their entirity. The trip lasted about ten minutes and the plants were back in the ground within an hour. Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot |
#5
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Moving Bamboo
My bamboo has died after moving it will it grow back?
"ems" wrote in message . .. W just recently sold our house in Portland OR. Although everyone told us we should remove the bamboo grove I have ben tending in the back yard prior to putting the house on the market because it would scare prospective buyers off, we did not, and it became one of the house's hottest selling points. I put a clause in the contract that I could claim a couple of samples from the bamboo grove for our new place and a couple of weeks ago, we went over and dug some up. Due to some nice new rhizomes in a slightly rasied area and some nice soft soil, we got a nice stand of Phyllostachys aurea, about an inch thick and several mature stalks of Phyllostachys dulcis about two inches thick, along with sizable root balls. We also ended up taking two large and seemingly vibrant root balls of the dulcis with no stalks. Originally we planned on cutting the plants back to about eight feet for transport, but at the last moment we decided to throw caution to the winds and take the plants in their entirity. The trip lasted about ten minutes and the plants were back in the ground within an hour. Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot |
#6
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Moving Bamboo
Claire Burton wrote:
My bamboo has died after moving it will it grow back? "ems" wrote in message . .. W just recently sold our house in Portland OR. Although everyone told us we should remove the bamboo grove I have ben tending in the back yard prior to putting the house on the market because it would scare prospective buyers off, we did not, and it became one of the house's hottest selling points. I put a clause in the contract that I could claim a couple of samples from the bamboo grove for our new place and a couple of weeks ago, we went over and dug some up. Due to some nice new rhizomes in a slightly rasied area and some nice soft soil, we got a nice stand of Phyllostachys aurea, about an inch thick and several mature stalks of Phyllostachys dulcis about two inches thick, along with sizable root balls. We also ended up taking two large and seemingly vibrant root balls of the dulcis with no stalks. Originally we planned on cutting the plants back to about eight feet for transport, but at the last moment we decided to throw caution to the winds and take the plants in their entirity. The trip lasted about ten minutes and the plants were back in the ground within an hour. Now comes the question. Everyday the leaves curl up like the plant is going to die, and every night they open back up again. Ground is moist, drainage is good. What are my chances that these plants will establish and what can I do to help them along? Lastly will the extensive rhizomes planted with no visible shoots have any chance of survival? Advice is welcome. Eliot If you die will you come back? -- Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington USDA Zone 8 Sunset Zone 5 |
#7
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Moving Bamboo
"Claire Burton" wrote in message ... My bamboo has died after moving it will it grow back? I'm assuming from your post that the above-ground part looks dead. That's not uncommon when moving bamboo. If you've kept the rhizome from drying out it may still be very alive. If the underground rhizome is alive it may continue growing, and you won't know for sure for a year or more. It may take a year before it presents new shoots. From U of Fl: "The first year it sleeps; the second year it creeps, the third year it leaps." JimR's rule of life #7: Never bet against bamboo growing. Good luck and regards -- |
#8
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Moving Bamboo
In article ZF8af.880$zU2.625@trnddc07, Travis
wrote: Claire Burton wrote: My bamboo has died after moving it will it grow back? SNIP If you die will you come back? It's odd how Travis always seems to have something nasty, condescending, misguided, or rude to say. I gave a friend some small rhizomes a few months ago in several pots. They all put up new shoots immediately and then died back. Ideally she should have put them in the ground immediately, but circumstances did not allow for that. My advice for her was to take care of them over the Winter and see what happens in the Spring. My, obviously amature, advice for you if your bamboo is in the ground, would be to mulch well for winter protection, fertilize lightly with a high nitrogen fertilizer wait and see. Good luck! EMS |
#9
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Moving Bamboo
About Travis:
He is obviously not a very nice or pleasant person, but that's him. Some people are just so. Unfortunately. Being a bamboo aficionado gives no guaranties on a persons character. "ems" wrote in message . .. In article ZF8af.880$zU2.625@trnddc07, Travis wrote: Claire Burton wrote: My bamboo has died after moving it will it grow back? SNIP If you die will you come back? It's odd how Travis always seems to have something nasty, condescending, misguided, or rude to say. I gave a friend some small rhizomes a few months ago in several pots. They all put up new shoots immediately and then died back. Ideally she should have put them in the ground immediately, but circumstances did not allow for that. My advice for her was to take care of them over the Winter and see what happens in the Spring. My, obviously amature, advice for you if your bamboo is in the ground, would be to mulch well for winter protection, fertilize lightly with a high nitrogen fertilizer wait and see. Good luck! EMS |
#10
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Moving Bamboo
Hi,
I would not worry about your bamboe. A Phyllostachys is virtual imposible to kill. The curling of the leaves is to prevent to much evaporation because it has to develop new roots. Beware of its tendance to "escape" in a garden. Remember that the first plants to appear in Japan after the atomic bombs were bamboes. Excuse my English, but i'm Flemish. |
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