Bareroot Trees and Shrubs are Best! And Here is Why.


by Julian Bosdari - Date: 2008-07-29 - Word Count: 1183 Share This!

The planting season is closing in.  Generally hedging and trees are planted between the beginning of November and the end of March.  The reason for this is that plants move better if they are disturbed when dormant - a bit like a small child asleep on a sofa being moved to a bed upstairs.  In the morning it has no memory of the move - indeed it has little memory of where it fell asleep. This applies particularly to bare-root hedging plants and trees (plants that have been grown in open ground and are then lifted and have the soil shaken off their roots before being sold).This article assumes you have decided on the type of plant/plants you want; maybe a single species such as beech or yew, or a mixed hedge or copse. Now the choice you are faced with is whether to buy your hedging and trees in containers (pots) or bare-rooted.  Today a whole generation of gardeners has been raised on pot grown planting (mainly for the benefit of the garden centre industry). So, while there are some things in favour of containerised shrubs (indeed some cannot be moved bare-rooted at all) the advantages of using bare-rooted hedging plants and trees are overwhelming.  The purpose of this article is to set out the reasons why.Bare-root hedging plants are more economical than their pot grown equivalents. To be well grown a plant in a pot needs good quality compost, it needs to be repotted as it gets bigger, it needs hand weeding, it needs constant watering and it has to be moved from seed bed to polytunnel, to standing out bed and from there to garden centre display. A bare-rooted tree grows happily in mother nature's soil in a field, watered by the rain until it is lifted and sold. There is far less cost involved and it shows in the price you have to pay.Environmentally, container grown stock carries a high tariff. Bare-root hedging is rarely watered in the nursery as opposed to potted plants that need irrigation if it does not rain. If they are not watered daily, the compost in their pots tends to dry out rapidly on the sunny side and slowly on the shaded side) which leads to irregular root development and subsequent poor establishment in the ground.  (As an aside, it also does not help that plant pots are generally black - the colour that absorbs heat the fastest).  Still on the environmental front, containers means plastic.  Most pots are manufactured from petroleum products - very few are recycled.  Field grown hedging plants need no pots.  The compost used in containers is at best heavy and has to be transported to nurseries so increasing their carbon footprint.  At worst the same compost is also peat based and its production directly damages already dwindling ecosystems.  And then the pots, full of heavy compost have to be sent to you, using more packaging and consuming more greenhouse gas emitting fuel than their bare-rooted cousins. As an example, you could put two hundred and fifty 80cm tall bare-rooted yew hedging plants in the back of a medium sized family estate car. The same number in containers would need a 7.5 ton lorry to deliver them.Container grown plants need to be planted in a hole big enough to accommodate the medium in which they are growing. If the planting hole is in soil that drains less well than the compost in the pot, it fills with water and creates the conditions where roots rot (typically this happens in heavier, clay soils) and plants die. This effect is at its worst with potted hedging plants, which are typically planted in a trench that acts as a drain for the surrounding soil.  Equally, if the surrounding soil drains well, water can run away before the plant's rootball is wetted. Then it dies from under watering even though the soil around is moist.  By contrast, bare-rooted hedging plants and trees are planted directly into the surrounding soil.  Effectively there is no "hole" to fill with water so swamping the plant is impossible, and there is no risk of the compost drying out because there is no compost.One of the great concerns of the responsible container nurseryman is compost hygiene.  Potting compost can contain, and be a breeding ground for, a number of harmful animals and diseases (vine weevil, New Zealand flatworm, Phytopthora root rots etc).  One infected pot brought in from outside can contaminate a nursery or indeed, your garden.  It may not even be the supplying nursery's fault - pots standing side by side on a garden centre bench can cross infect and the longer they are "on the shelf" the greater the risk.  By contrast, as the name suggests, bare-rooted hedging stock is generally freshly lifted and delivered with virtually no soil attached to the roots therefore greatly lessening the chance of harbouring pests and infections.We all know what a bonsai tree looks like.  The reason it is a perfect "miniature" of the real thing is that its roots have been constricted - take another look at the size of a bonsai pot - it is so small that the roots it contains cannot support a larger plant. That is why the tree is stunted. Although not as exaggerated - the same is the case here - as soon as the roots of a plant hit the walls of a pot its rate of growth slows. When the pot is full of root, it stops. Bonsai is just an extreme example of this.  This stunting effect applies to almost any established pot grown specimen, but is completely absent with field grown hedging and trees.  They are invariably bigger, stronger, more vigorous and have superior root development than the same plant of the same age in a pot.Bare-root stock is easier and quicker to plant than container grown.  Ground preparation is simpler - for many species no cultivation is needed and weeds are simply sprayed off.  Bundles of hedging plants are much easier to move around a planting site than pots and the planting itself is generally into a slit rather than a hole so no soil has to be broken up or improved.However, perhaps the most important point in favour of bare-root hedging, trees and shrubs is that the plants simply establish better in the long run.  A pot-bound container grown specimen may well survive and grow away when planted out but its root system will never recover fully from the "institutionalising" it received in a pot.  Many years after a pot grown tree or shrub has been planted out, even when fully grown, it is more likely to be uprooted by a gale, or suffer in a drought because its roots were unable to fulfil properly their dual purposes of feeding and anchoring. No such problems ever face bare-rooted hedging or trees.So, if you are able to plan your hedge planting for the winter months, take a tip; save yourself money and effort, be good to the environment and produce a better end result buying and planting bare-rooted hedging, trees and shrubs.

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Julian Bosdari owns and runs  Ashridge Trees a wholesale plant nursery selling over 2 million plants per annum. He is anauthority on the propagation, planting and care of hedging plants,fruit trees, soft fruit and ornamental trees and shrubs.You can read his writings in hisblog, in trade magazines and widely published around theinternet Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

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