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[email protected] 28-09-2004 10:10 PM

overgrown root system
 
My friend has a 32" deep pond. The lilies have taken over. Now the
roots are taking up 24"'s of the pond.
Any suggestions on how to get rid of the roots without killing the
fish, frogs and everything else?

Thanks,
Dave

Derek Broughton 29-09-2004 01:18 PM

wrote:

My friend has a 32" deep pond. The lilies have taken over. Now the
roots are taking up 24"'s of the pond.
Any suggestions on how to get rid of the roots without killing the
fish, frogs and everything else?


Not really, at this point. Any digging is going to be hard on the fauna.
Dig up one lily at a time, prune/divide it (be brutal - these plants are
obviously so healthy, you don't need to pussyfoot around them), replant it
and let the water clear before doing another one.

In future, pull & divide every year - it took a bit more than a year for
them to get that dense!
--
derek

Crashj 29-09-2004 03:16 PM

wrote in message . com...
My friend has a 32" deep pond. The lilies have taken over. Now the
roots are taking up 24"'s of the pond.
Any suggestions on how to get rid of the roots without killing the
fish, frogs and everything else?


Sell the plants on eBay.
Crashj "Nothing wasted" Johnson

Crashj 29-09-2004 03:16 PM

wrote in message . com...
My friend has a 32" deep pond. The lilies have taken over. Now the
roots are taking up 24"'s of the pond.
Any suggestions on how to get rid of the roots without killing the
fish, frogs and everything else?


Sell the plants on eBay.
Crashj "Nothing wasted" Johnson

~ jan JJsPond.us 30-09-2004 04:27 PM

And I would add to Derek's post, re-pot in containers, so they're easier to
remove/divide next time. Sounds like his pond needs a good bottom cleaning
before fall anyway. ~ jan

My friend has a 32" deep pond. The lilies have taken over. Now the
roots are taking up 24"'s of the pond.
Any suggestions on how to get rid of the roots without killing the
fish, frogs and everything else?


On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 09:18:11 -0300, Derek Broughton
wrote:

Not really, at this point. Any digging is going to be hard on the fauna.
Dig up one lily at a time, prune/divide it (be brutal - these plants are
obviously so healthy, you don't need to pussyfoot around them), replant it
and let the water clear before doing another one.

In future, pull & divide every year - it took a bit more than a year for
them to get that dense!


~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

Derek Broughton 30-09-2004 04:36 PM

~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:

And I would add to Derek's post, re-pot in containers, so they're easier
to remove/divide next time. Sounds like his pond needs a good bottom
cleaning before fall anyway. ~ jan

Oh, and I'd add to that - experiment with potting media.

I had great success with leaving my lilies bareroot. I wired them into
milkcrates filled with rocks. Then they're _really_ easy to divide. If
you get the weight of the rocks right, they actually float to the surface
when they're ready for dividing, because the bouyancy of the foliage
defeats the weight of the rocks!

You can pot in kitty litter (needs washing well), or gravel (difficult to
get a shovel through to divide them). Forget soil, though. They just
don't need the extra nutrients.
--
derek


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