[CANUFNET] Planting depth

Brad Gurr gurrb at yahoo.com
Sun Mar 27 20:02:26 EDT 2011


It's extremely rare to find a tree thats not planted to deep 

Personal observation .

Sent from my iPod

On Mar 25, 2011, at 5:02 PM, "Mark Peterson" <mpa at golden.net> wrote:

> The problem with planting at the same depth as previously planted is that often the previous depth may not be the 'proper' depth. In the nursery, the 'proper' depth (in my opinion should be at the point of root flare) may have been buried due to cultivation practices. Sometimes this depth may be 4 inches or more. Look at natural growth trees - they all have the root flare visible. Find the root flare.
>  
> Mark Peterson, BES, MLArch, OALA 
> Mark Peterson & Associates, Landscape Architect
> (519)743-2990        www.openspacesolutions.com
>  
> Tree Visual Impact
> Can we afford to wait 50 to 100 years for a street tree to mature to gain the right scale and visual effect? Will a tree planted today be alive in 50 years? The visual impact of a street tree lies in crown volume. A tree must be large enough to give immediate shade and should be in sufficient numbers to create visual continuity. Therefore, plant either a few large trees or many smaller ones. 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Braaten, Lorilee (IS - Parks)
> To: 'canufnet at list.web.net'
> Sent: Friday, March 25, 2011 3:12 PM
> Subject: [CANUFNET] Planting depth
> 
> Hello everyone,
> 
>  
> 
> I have recently attended to two seminars, one with Dr. Ed Gilman and one with Dr. Hanna Mathers.  The two have very different views on planting depth.
> 
> I would like to hear others opinions on planting trees at the same depth as previously planted vs. planting higher (at or near the root flare).  It seems there may be possible problems associated with either practice when planting container or bareroot trees and some issues may be species specific.  We have had good results with planting depth near the root flare and have not experienced any issues because of it.  I am interested in your comments.
> 
>  
> 
> Lorilee Braaten
> 
> Nursery Technician, Urban Forestry
> 
> City of Saskatoon
> 
> 1101 Ave P North. Saskatoon, Sk.  S7L 7K6
> 
> cell: (306)220 6318
> 
> fax: (306)975 3034
> 
>  
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