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Mike Lyle 13-02-2005 08:13 PM

goldfinch wrote:
A Magnolia seiboldii plant has arrived from a mail order company,
with its' roots encased in what appears to be a net bag. I have
never come across this before and was wondering if anyone else has,
and if so, do I plant it as it is, or remove the bag first.

I know that magnolias are particularly sensative to root

disturbance,
so is this a new way round the problem.


Perhaps it depends what the net is made of: natural fibres will rot
away, of course, while synthetic ones won't. On the whole I'd say
unpick the thing gently (and I'd do it in the planting hole in case
the soil in the root ball tries to fall out), unless somebody here
recognizes the situation and says to leave it on. The firm should
really have enclosed instructions: naughty.

Mike.



Emrys Davies 13-02-2005 10:04 PM

Hopefully you will find this site helpful. It tells you exactly what
you need to know.

http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/c.../planting.html
Scroll to 'Planting balled and burlapped plants'.

Regards,
Emrys Davies.

"goldfinch" wrote in message
...
A Magnolia seiboldii plant has arrived from a mail order company, with

its'
roots encased in what appears to be a net bag. I have never come

across
this before and was wondering if anyone else has, and if so, do I

plant it
as it is, or remove the bag first.

I know that magnolias are particularly sensative to root disturbance,

so is
this a new way round the problem.

TIA.

Marina
E. Sx





goldfinch 14-02-2005 01:59 AM

Magnolia seiboldii
 
A Magnolia seiboldii plant has arrived from a mail order company, with its'
roots encased in what appears to be a net bag. I have never come across
this before and was wondering if anyone else has, and if so, do I plant it
as it is, or remove the bag first.

I know that magnolias are particularly sensative to root disturbance, so is
this a new way round the problem.

TIA.

Marina
E. Sx



goldfinch 15-02-2005 05:23 AM


"Emrys Davies" wrote in message
...
Hopefully you will find this site helpful. It tells you exactly what
you need to know.


http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/c.../planting.html
Scroll to 'Planting balled and burlapped plants'.

Regards,
Emrys Davies.

Thanks for this Emrys. I will try the burning tip tomorrow ;-)

Best wishes,
Marina




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