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eastcoastguyz 25-08-2006 11:01 AM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 
I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!


Carl 1 Lucky Texan 25-08-2006 12:22 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 
eastcoastguyz wrote:

I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!

If you mow near this area, DO NOT plant any type of cypress! The knees
will screw up the lawn.

There are likely other tall plants, not necessarily trees, that will
grow there. But yeah, pond, bald, I guess leland will grow in water.


Carl


--
to reply, change ( .not) to ( .net)

scfundogs 25-08-2006 03:18 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 
"eastcoastguyz" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!


For how long a time does the water stay pooled? If its alot of water for
long periods of time have you considered having a french drain installed?

--
Tara



[email protected] 25-08-2006 03:42 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 
You are confusing species of "cypress". Yes, pond and baldcypress are
adaptable in very wet areas, and will eventually for the knees IF they
are in a wet area. Neither pond nor bald cypress are true cypress.
Leyland cypress is actually an intergeneric hybrid between monterrey
cypress(a true cypress) and alaskan cedar(falsecypress). Wet areas
actually cause leyland cypress to be more prone to disease, a
characteristic most likley inherited from its chamaecyparis parentage.
As for the "knees", only the species Taxodium(pond, baldcypress, etc..)
form them, and they are not cypress anyway so do not be afraid of
planting "any cypress" there because of the knees. I would suggest
googling with what area you are in and also "trees tolerant of wet
soil". Google is a great tool, try it!

Toad








Carl 1 Lucky Texan wrote:
eastcoastguyz wrote:

I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!

If you mow near this area, DO NOT plant any type of cypress! The knees
will screw up the lawn.

There are likely other tall plants, not necessarily trees, that will
grow there. But yeah, pond, bald, I guess leland will grow in water.


Carl


--
to reply, change ( .not) to ( .net)



told2b 26-08-2006 10:20 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 

eastcoastguyz wrote:
I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!


Leland Cypress are very intolerant of flooding. Consider Heritage
Birch, Thornless Cockspur, Ilex 'Winter Red', Wax Myrtle and/or
numerous Willows: Bankers, "Snake', Corkscrew, Black, Fantail, Artic
Blue, and 'Hakuro Nishiki.'
HTH


eastcoastguyz 29-08-2006 10:13 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 

scfundogs wrote:
"eastcoastguyz" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!


For how long a time does the water stay pooled? If its alot of water for
long periods of time have you considered having a french drain installed?

--
Tara


That's a good question.This area does not have standing water 24/7/365,
only during the rains and the following days after it. When we have a
strench of rain for days or most of a week, water is standing there
most of that time. I didn't measure this, but I would guess it is about
3 inches. Can Leland Cypress handle that? Or is what I described
considered "flooding"? I get the impression that there is so much clay
in the soil is the reason it lingers there.


readandpostrosie 30-08-2006 04:50 PM

Leland cypress - Like having lots of water or not?
 
YES, i want to know also!
"eastcoastguyz" wrote in message
ups.com...

scfundogs wrote:
"eastcoastguyz" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm a little confused. A landscaper suggested that in a low area of our
yard where water pools at times of the year from lots of rain, said
that we should plant Leland cypress there since they love the water.
But I just read some older postings to this newsgroup where people said
they should have good drainage and won't like having their feet sit in
wet clay. (I'm typing this from memory).

Which is it? If I want to plant a row of trees in an area which is low
and water tends to pool there at times will Leland Cypress do fine or
are they going to die?

This conversation all came up, since I wanted to plant a row of trees
for privacy and was concerned about the water there during the heavy
rain months. I suspect since the soil has clay in it, that is making
the water stay around much longer too. Thanks!


For how long a time does the water stay pooled? If its alot of water for
long periods of time have you considered having a french drain installed?

--
Tara


That's a good question.This area does not have standing water 24/7/365,
only during the rains and the following days after it. When we have a
strench of rain for days or most of a week, water is standing there
most of that time. I didn't measure this, but I would guess it is about
3 inches. Can Leland Cypress handle that? Or is what I described
considered "flooding"? I get the impression that there is so much clay
in the soil is the reason it lingers there.





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