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Old 19-05-2008, 11:43 AM
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Default Cordyline Australis about to keel!!

Hi,
hoping someone can help as my pride and joy is about to keel over I think! On of my Cordyline Australis is around 7ft high with trunk diameter of around 18/19 inches and was I belive firmly planted in. This has been sound sound for around 3 years but lately I have noticed its starting to lean and I fear the roots are being stressed due to this, yesterday I took a good look and its baffling me how its staying upright, thats how much its leaning.

What are my options to fix this?

1 - Use strapping of some sort to try and pull back ot to at least offer support and minimise further damage? If so can I buy in the UK?

2 - Look to buy some sort of stake again to offer support, but wonder if this could do more damage

3 - Dig down [missing roots!] and replant the tree upright. I dont favour this option as could potentially kill the root system..

Any other ideas appreciated and thankyou for reading
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Old 20-05-2008, 11:32 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by garyb View Post
Hi,
What are my options to fix this?

1 - Use strapping of some sort to try and pull back ot to at least offer support and minimise further damage? If so can I buy in the UK?

2 - Look to buy some sort of stake again to offer support, but wonder if this could do more damage

3 - Dig down [missing roots!] and replant the tree upright. I dont favour this option as could potentially kill the root system..

Any other ideas appreciated and thankyou for reading
Heres a couple of photos showing the situation, really need help as its appears to be leaning more each day?

http://gary.brett.googlepages.com/garden

Thanx again
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Old 20-05-2008, 08:07 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Cordyline Australis about to keel!!

g'day gary,

looks more like a yucca in ways but not to worry.

i reckon it is a cramped growing position by the looks of it? that is
it is too close to a structure as as the side shoots develop they need
space to grow.

so you can maybe stake it a bit by putting a stake in on the side that
is leaning away and then use some light rope that has a section of
around 12"s of old garden hose to prevent rope damage to the plant,
leave this stake until the plant has grown past the obstruction, it is
only for support to stop the plant from leaning to a point of no
return, that is maybe falling over.

or trim off all the foliage except for the growing tip, and transplant
the plant, you won't need a huge root ball, and the best time might be
in the growing season which i figure is about now for you?

just to confirm have you tried grabbing the trunk and wriggling it a
littel? if it is firm in the ground then i may be correct if it loose
in the ground then it could mean root damage and then you will have to
transplant the plant, but i can't imagine root damage on a mature
plant in a long time position. if it ahd root damage it probably would
have fallen over by now.

On Mon, 19 May 2008 11:43:06 +0100, garyb
wrote:

snipped
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len & bev

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://www.lensgarden.com.au/
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Old 21-05-2008, 05:49 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Cordyline Australis about to keel!!

garyb wrote:
garyb;792932 Wrote:

Hi,
What are my options to fix this?

1 - Use strapping of some sort to try and pull back ot to at least
offer support and minimise further damage? If so can I buy in the UK?

2 - Look to buy some sort of stake again to offer support, but wonder
if this could do more damage

3 - Dig down [missing roots!] and replant the tree upright. I dont
favour this option as could potentially kill the root system..

Any other ideas appreciated and thankyou for reading


Hi,
C. australis require good drainage
Plant appears to be mulched to the stem and may be over-watered. If you
find that the roots are rotting or there is serious rot at ground level
(loose "bark") then staking is doubtful and curing the rot even more
doubtful. Consider cutting the plant above damage, drying for a couple
weeks and re-planting. This "new" plant would require stakes and very
LITTLE water. If there is enough energy still in the plant and you don't
live in a marginal area for these it should set new roots.
HTH -_- how

--
no NEWS is good
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Old 21-05-2008, 10:59 AM
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Hi and thank you both for your replies much to think about!

The benches on the left were built after the tree was planted so root system is well below the foundations for this, which are around ground level. I understand it may be cramped but have no other options in urban back garden unfortunately. from trunbk base to hardscaping is around 1metre with root system approx 500mm down. If I wiggle it about some it does move more than my other Australis but not overly. I have today hung a small stone on a piece of light string 1/2 inch from soil, if its touching the soil by the weekend I know I am in trouble I guess!

The plant itself seems very healthy and is currently flowering on 3 branches out of 4, do you really think there is a chance I could dig this up & replant [staked] without doing root damage? If not is it wise to stake by the bench on the left and use garden strapping just to take weight rather than try to pull it back to normal position?

Sorry for all questions, I think Im getting paranoid about it!!

Again thanx for your help, its appreciated
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