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- From: loftis@hpcc01.corp.hp.com (Kirk Loftis)
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 15:55:40 GMT
- Subject: Re: Clay soil and fruit trees
- Message-ID: <3740072@hpcc01.corp.hp.com>
- Organization: the HP Corporate notes server
- Path: sparky!uunet!pmafire!news.dell.com!natinst.com!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!sdd.hp.com!hpscit.sc.hp.com!hplextra!hpcc05!hpcc01!loftis
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- References: <1993Jan13.101857.363@cpvax.cpses.tu.com>
- Lines: 54
-
- / hpcc01:rec.gardens / bmoon@eis.calstate.edu (Bruce A. Moon) / 12:06 pm Jan 20, 1993 /
- We just moved and left behind a healthy 12-year old cherry growing in
- heavy clay soil. It was at the back of our yard which was higher than our
- neighbors. Cherry doesn't tolerate being wet.
- I'm in a dilemna at my new
- house-- the rains are so heavy this year it is hard to evaluate the sites.
- Here are some thoughts I've had:
- 1. Bring in soil and plant it in a raised bed. This makes it so you have
- to treat it as container grown.
- 2. Plant on a slope that drains.
- 3. Put in a French-drain (Dig down a few feet away from the roots and put
- in gravel so water drains off.
- You might think that amending the hole with compost might be the
- answer. Research, however, show that the plant acts like a potted plant
- when it reaches the heavier soil.
- Except for Stella and Lapins, you need two cherries for fruit. I
- believe these are both a little more tolerant of heavy soils.
- ----------
-
- The ground that I planted on is a good slope, so much that I have to
- worry about eroison. The grass is barely coming up, there has been so
- much rain that it is never sunny enough to germante the grass (yes, I
- know it is late to plant grass). I dug a hole deeper and wider than all
- the fruit trees, then I added in soil/compost mixture from the store
- with a bit of the soil that was from the yard. This might make it
- behave like a container plant, I will have to think about that one.
-
- The Cherry I have is a Stella, I might still plant another Cherry (Bing
- and hope the neighbors have the other trees that I need).
-
- I have a question about distance between trees. I have planting about
- 5-6 feet from the fence and about 8 feet between each tree. Is this too
- far apart? I wanted the tree to be fully in my yard, not overhanging in
- the neighbors yard (I will prune the tree on that side to prevent this).
- Most of my trees are semi-dwarf, I hope that when they are grown that
- they fill in and cause a hedge effect about the fence line and above.
- In other words, block the neighbors view with a "tree hedge". Does the
- distance above sound like this will work?
-
- Another note on the yard. Yes it has a good slope (it drops about a
- foot for every 50 feet). One side of my yard has a drainage gutter
- (cement) and all along the back of the house has a drainage gutter that
- goes down a "gutter hole" to the city sewer system. As I mentioned in a
- previous post, we are about 5 feet higher than the neighbor, this
- drainage gutter prevents the water from flowing in the neighbors yard
- and flooding them. I guess my question/point, is this enough drainage
- for the trees? I think it is....
-
- I might go buy some more bare root trees this weekend, happy gardening.
-
- Kirk
-
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-