white pine
2 years ago I bought 3 white pines (about 4 feet tall) One died same
year. After digging it out I noticed that when balled, the grower severly cut the center root. I believe this caused the tree failure. The remaining 2 trees have not grown an inch. I believe their center roots have been cut too. Is there anything that I can do to turn this trees around? I treated both with liquid root stimulator last spring, but no growth. |
white pine
higgledy wrote:
2 years ago I bought 3 white pines (about 4 feet tall) One died same year. After digging it out I noticed that when balled, the grower severly cut the center root. I believe this caused the tree failure. The remaining 2 trees have not grown an inch. I believe their center roots have been cut too. Is there anything that I can do to turn this trees around? I treated both with liquid root stimulator last spring, but no growth. a) transplanted trees of any species can take several years to start growing, and the bigger they are at transplanting, the longer it seems to take. Be patient. The fact that they've survived thus far is a good sign. Also, white pines can be very slow growers in anything other than "perfect" conditions. They're adapted to survive a wide range of soils, light conditions, and microclimates. I have one at the back of my lot that is now about ten years old, and it's barely doubled in height since it was planted. Mind you, it's growing on a rock pile... :-) b) pines like acid soil, so test the soil, and give them some acid fertiliser if needed. HTH |
white pine
How do I test the soil? I use Hollytone on other acid-loving plants. I
guess I can use that on the white pines too. |
white pine
"higgledy" wrote:
How do I test the soil? With a soil test kit. They are do-it-yourself kits sold at nurseries, home centers and hardware stores. Also, most extension agents have soil test kits where you send the soil in for analysis. This is a more thorough test. They test for N, P, K and pH. (sodium, phosphorus, potassium, and acidity) -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to Visit my Rhododendron and Azalea web pages at: http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman/rhody.html Also visit the Rhododendron and Azalea Bookstore at: http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman/rhodybooks.html Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA Zone 6 |
white pine
higgledy wrote:
How do I test the soil? I use Hollytone on other acid-loving plants. I guess I can use that on the white pines too. Your local garden supply store should have soil testing kits. |
white pine
Get your soil tested by the local extension. its worth the $10.
Pinching new growth helps the tree out as well. Pines are slow vertical growers. Also, if you are getting pine weevils killing the main leader, use some merit. It can cause spider mites, but will help kill the weevils. "higgledy" wrote in message oups.com... 2 years ago I bought 3 white pines (about 4 feet tall) One died same year. After digging it out I noticed that when balled, the grower severly cut the center root. I believe this caused the tree failure. The remaining 2 trees have not grown an inch. I believe their center roots have been cut too. Is there anything that I can do to turn this trees around? I treated both with liquid root stimulator last spring, but no growth. |
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