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Mceezee 21-10-2003 12:02 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 

When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?

Cereoid-UR12- 21-10-2003 12:12 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
During the daylight hours!!!

Its better you wait until next spring.


Mceezee wrote in message
...

When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone

7). Is
it better now, or early spring?




Phisherman 21-10-2003 12:22 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On 20 Oct 2003 22:43:05 GMT, (Mceezee) wrote:


When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


They transplant easily. I'd do it now.

animaux 21-10-2003 04:32 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On 20 Oct 2003 22:43:05 GMT, (Mceezee) opined:


When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


It is always better to transplant in fall so the roots have time to repair
themselves before the ground freezes. It's easier for them to recover over the
winter, than it is to withstand the heat of summer.

animaux 21-10-2003 04:32 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
Why?


On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:05:32 GMT, "Cereoid-UR12-"
opined:

During the daylight hours!!!

Its better you wait until next spring.


Mceezee wrote in message
...

When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone

7). Is
it better now, or early spring?




zhanataya 21-10-2003 04:42 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 03:30:27 GMT, animaux
wrote:

Why?


Because it is easier for homo sapiens to see what they are dong when
it is light.

zhan

Mark Anderson 21-10-2003 05:22 AM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
In article says...
When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


It is always better to transplant in fall so the roots have time to repair
themselves before the ground freezes. It's easier for them to recover over the
winter, than it is to withstand the heat of summer.


I don't know about the fall but my parents have transplanted Rose of
Sharon from house to house whenever they moved for longer than I'm alive
and they claim that the spring is the best time to transplant them. I'm
in Zone 5, Chicago so things might be better down south.




animaux 21-10-2003 02:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 22:38:03 -0500, zhanataya opined:

On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 03:30:27 GMT, animaux
wrote:

Why?


Because it is easier for homo sapiens to see what they are dong when
it is light.

zhan


No, why spring? Ya smart ass ya!

animaux 21-10-2003 02:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:17:53 -0500, Mark Anderson
opined:

In article says...
When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


It is always better to transplant in fall so the roots have time to repair
themselves before the ground freezes. It's easier for them to recover over the
winter, than it is to withstand the heat of summer.


I don't know about the fall but my parents have transplanted Rose of
Sharon from house to house whenever they moved for longer than I'm alive
and they claim that the spring is the best time to transplant them. I'm
in Zone 5, Chicago so things might be better down south.



It is very different down south where I live, but I lived the better portion of
my life on Long Island which is zone 6b-7a and I always did my major
transplanting in the early fall. I suppose it could be done in spring, but the
person asked for opinions and I gave mine. No dogma here, just my experience.

Phisherman 21-10-2003 02:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:17:53 -0500, Mark Anderson
wrote:

In article says...
When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


It is always better to transplant in fall so the roots have time to repair
themselves before the ground freezes. It's easier for them to recover over the
winter, than it is to withstand the heat of summer.


I don't know about the fall but my parents have transplanted Rose of
Sharon from house to house whenever they moved for longer than I'm alive
and they claim that the spring is the best time to transplant them. I'm
in Zone 5, Chicago so things might be better down south.



It may depend on the location. We have summer droughts that can last
over a month--that will make it tough on transplants. In the spring
sometimes there is excessive rain and ground saturation which is not
good for digging. ROS grow like weeds. I've transplanted hundreds of
them at varies times of the year and all survived. The ones
transplanted in the fall grow better in the long run, but not sure the
reason--maybe the roots are feeding during the winter months and
foliage is not important.

Karen 21-10-2003 05:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
(Mceezee) wrote in message ...
When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?


Now. Because you don't have to water it often. There is nothing wrong
to transplant it in spring either.

animaux 21-10-2003 09:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:48:16 GMT, Phisherman opined:

On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 23:17:53 -0500, Mark Anderson
wrote:

In article says...
When is a good time to transplant a Rose of Sharon plant? (I am in Zone 7). Is
it better now, or early spring?

It is always better to transplant in fall so the roots have time to repair
themselves before the ground freezes. It's easier for them to recover over the
winter, than it is to withstand the heat of summer.


I don't know about the fall but my parents have transplanted Rose of
Sharon from house to house whenever they moved for longer than I'm alive
and they claim that the spring is the best time to transplant them. I'm
in Zone 5, Chicago so things might be better down south.



It may depend on the location. We have summer droughts that can last
over a month--that will make it tough on transplants. In the spring
sometimes there is excessive rain and ground saturation which is not
good for digging. ROS grow like weeds. I've transplanted hundreds of
them at varies times of the year and all survived. The ones
transplanted in the fall grow better in the long run, but not sure the
reason--maybe the roots are feeding during the winter months and
foliage is not important.


There's no maybe about it. Plants transplanted in fall always do better and take
much less care the following summer. The roots are always in a state of growth,
even in winter, up to the point where the ground freezes at 27 degrees.
Perennials, which is what trees and shrubs are, always have some part of them
which stays alive. In this case, it is the roots.

zhanataya 21-10-2003 10:02 PM

Transplanting Rose of Sharon
 
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 12:46:15 GMT, animaux
wrote:

On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 22:38:03 -0500, zhanataya opined:

On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 03:30:27 GMT, animaux
wrote:

Why?


Because it is easier for homo sapiens to see what they are dong when
it is light.

zhan


No, why spring? Ya smart ass ya!


Couldn't hold it back, it was a perfect setup. ;-)

zhan


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