Fertilizing dormant container plants over winter?
12 years ago
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- 12 years ago
- 12 years ago
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Question on soil, planting dormant trees, and potential fertilize
Comments (2)Are you truly located in FL? And this tree was fully dormant? Where did it come from? The reason I ask is that I am located in the far north (the mild far north to be sure :)) and flowering cherries have been out of dormancy here for weeks. So describe what the tree looked like before planting and how it was wrapped or potted or whatever when you got it. The only possible reason to soak the tree roots was if it was bare rooted and the roots had dried out....which in itself is not a good thing. Longer soaking is not necessarily a help and could be a serious hindrance if the roots are already compromised. Generally it is a planting soil that is specified for trees and shrubs, not a potting soil and there is a significant difference between the two. If you are growing it in a container or pot, you want to use potting soil. And a good quality, longlasting, high durability mix at that, like Al's gritty mix you'll find referred to frequently here. If you are growing it in the ground, you can amend the area with the planting soil, although that is not always a requirement or even advised in many cases. If planted in a container, fertilizing is a must, whether you start out with a slow release like Osmocote to begin with or just use a liquid. Plants that go directly into the ground are generally NOT fertilized at planting although a starter or root boosting fertilizer can be used. Will any of these issues kill the tree? Doubtful :-) Good drainage is the most important issue when dealing with a containerized tree......after that, providing sufficient water and nutrient supplementation. Coffee grounds are a weak fertilizer at best and not much use in a container situation. Much better to add them to a compost, then add to the garden. They can be used as a mulch but if allowed to dry they will crust over and become water repellant....See MoreUse of metal containers for plants over the winter
Comments (2)Well, it depends on how big the containers are and how cold your winters are. Being metal, the soil in them will get colder during the winter, so that might freeze your plants. If you have a wet winter, without drainage, the container might split because the water will freeze in the soil and cause it to expand and split the metal. I have two metal well buckets that I left out one year and they both split at the bottom. So far, they've not dropped the bottoms so I just left them as is for drainage....See MoreOver-wintering a container buddleia...how?
Comments (4)hey of the few things i find nearly impossible to grow in my z5 ... this is it ... you are z6 ... so it might be a bit easier .... depending on whether you have a z6 or a z5 winter ... i THINK the major problem with this plant.. for me anyway ... was or is.. wet feet ... in cold weather ... IMHO.. keeping it potted will be problematic ... as there is such a fine line with retained moisture in a pot ... ibso presto ergo .... [that means nothing.. lol] .... NO MATTER THE BARGAIN ... I WOULD SKIP IT .... ken...See MoreWinter Fertilizing Container Citrus Zone 9 ?
Comments (5)Hi and welcome here.. Based on what you said, "Winters are quite mild" "I tranplanted from the Four Winds nursery container to a Tapla Mix in to a slightly larger pot. The tree was not overly root bound". Here is what I suggest..:-) Continue to fertilize at a lower dose than you are doing at "every" watering, 1/4 teaspoon per gallon of water, and don't forget to use vinegar... A continual feed at such a low rate will continue the balance of nutrients to your tree through the warmer spells,when your plant needs it, and not over burden it.Everytime the soils warms above 55 degrees, the roots are looking for nutrients, NO nutrients, therefore the yellowing leaves. Fruitnut is right. When roots due get cold, as in below 55 degrees on a consistant basis, day and night, they stop looking for nourishment. But when they awake, the tree is hungry and you should have something there in the soiless mix that we are using for the taking..:-).. A weakend plant due to improper fertilizing also invites pests. If you are using Al's mix, which I do, the unused fertilizer will just be flushed out and never over burden your plants anyway. There is also no build of salts... There is a constant supply of nutrients in winter to ALL citrus in ground from organic matter readily available when the trees decide they need to feed. Soil is alive. If you withhold all together, you will be looking at nothing more than non-nutrative mix.. Hope this helps...If you need proof of this suggestion, I can provide the pics...:-)...See MoreRelated Professionals
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