GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Lawns (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/lawns/)
-   -   Tree Roots (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/lawns/95371-tree-roots.html)

T. L. Pope-Green 05-06-2005 02:50 PM

Tree Roots
 
I have a lot of roots from a maple tree exposed, is there anything you can
do about them?
TIA

--



Doug Kanter 05-06-2005 09:05 PM


"T. L. Pope-Green" wrote in message
news:xqDoe.6405$nr3.4640@trnddc02...
I have a lot of roots from a maple tree exposed, is there anything you can
do about them?
TIA


Not much. I couple of my neighbors built raised beds on top of the roots,
which worked for about 2 seasons. The tree grew very fine roots upward into
the soil and turned it into the equivalent of botanical steel wool.
Impossible to hack through the resulting tangle.

If you want to hide them, plant a bulletproof groundcover like vinca or
pachysandra. But, if your goal is to make the root area mow-able, forget it.



Suzy O 08-06-2005 12:10 AM

This is very common and proper for maples. Repeat after me, "surface roots
are good". ;) If you look closely, you can see that they look the same as
the bark of the trunk, not like roots typically buried under soil. Piling
soil on these will eventually cause them to rot & the rot will travel into
the vascular system of the tree, eventually killing it. Best bet is to
remove whatever soil, grass, etc. that's over the surface roots and replace
with any mulch except! stone or marble, which holds too much heat over the
roots.

Hope this helps.

Suzy O, Zone 5 Wisconsin


"T. L. Pope-Green" wrote in message
news:xqDoe.6405$nr3.4640@trnddc02...
I have a lot of roots from a maple tree exposed, is there anything you can
do about them?
TIA

--





Steveo 08-06-2005 12:40 AM

"Suzy O" wrote:
This is very common and proper for maples. Repeat after me, "surface
roots are good". ;) If you look closely, you can see that they look the
same as the bark of the trunk, not like roots typically buried under
soil. Piling soil on these will eventually cause them to rot & the rot
will travel into the vascular system of the tree, eventually killing it.
Best bet is to remove whatever soil, grass, etc. that's over the surface
roots and replace with any mulch except! stone or marble, which holds too
much heat over the roots.

Hope this helps.

Suzy O, Zone 5 Wisconsin

Yep! They can also be chopped out but that's a short term fix since you're
actually root pruning when you do that, and so you're encouraging more
surface roots to fill that area in.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:09 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter