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Old 13-03-2009, 11:49 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Mulching new trees


"Martin" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 00:58:17 GMT, Rusty_Hinge

wrote:

The message
from "Kathy" contains these words:
"Rusty_Hinge" wrote in message
.uk...
The message
from "Ophelia" contains these words:

Thanks for that Rusty saved Is this the same advice for all trees?

Any that I can think of. The adage used to be (in France) that you
plant
a vine over a dead donkey.

I planted a honeysuckle over a dead cat [victim of a prat driving too
fast
through the village]. It grew very leggy but didn't do much otherwise.


I would have thought it might have stopped growing after that...


Kathy was spellbound.


What?

--
Kathy

It's pointless to try and discuss ethics with a spider.



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Old 14-03-2009, 12:20 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Mulching new trees

The message
from Roy Bailey contains these words:
In article ,
Rusty_Hinge writes


For future planting, my advice would be to dig a big hole and toss in
bones - left over from roasts, stockmaking etc - some fairly large ones
and a lot of little ones - chicken, etc., also any old leather and
woollens (not plastic imitations and acrylic!) and mix bonemeal or
blood, fish and bone meal with the spoil as you replace it.


There is a thread currently running on the UKCider mailing list about
planting apple trees, and the advice is not to do this.


It is called 'pit planting' and advice from Thornhayes Nurseries is
quoted. See http://www.thornhayes-nursery.co.uk/advice_planting.php.


When I planted my orchard 9 years ago a forestry expert advised me just
to put a little bone meal and dried blood in the hole.


You pays your money and you takes your choice - I respected the
expertise of the venerable gardener who told me the method. Seems
logical - blood is a more-or-less immediate nutrient, and bonemeal
releases nutrients slowly over a number of years. The same nutrients are
released from bones and other animal matter at a much slower rate over a
much longer period.

One tree was planted over such a 'pit' last year, and another tree will
be planted over a roe deer I planted last summer.

We shall see...

--
Rusty
Growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional.
Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk
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Old 14-03-2009, 11:45 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Mulching new trees

On 12 Mar, 23:36, "Kathy" wrote:

I planted a honeysuckle over a dead cat [victim of a prat driving too fast
through the village]. *It grew very leggy but didn't do much otherwise.


but I bet if the trellis gave way it would always land the right way
up.
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