Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Best time to plant a tree? Probably now

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2020 10:51 PM
  • Best time to plant a tree? Probably now

Planting a tree is one of the best things you can do to help the planet, and these days it's gotten easier. There's a better understanding now of what trees need, including when they should generally be planted (the fall).

Why plant trees? It's well-known that trees mitigate global warming by taking in and storing carbon dioxide. Their shade can cool things down in summer. As windbreaks, they can slow heat loss. Their beauty and delicious fruits and nuts are other perks.

Experts used to recommend planting trees in spring. But that's changed for most species.

With spring planting, there's a danger that stems can start to grow before the roots are established in the ground. Fall planting helps avoid that. Stems can't grow until they have experienced a winter’s worth of cold. Roots, on the other hand, grow whenever the soil temperature is above about 40 degrees, so they can still make use of summer’s lingering heat in the ground.

BEST PLANTING TECHNIQUES ARE ALSO EASIEST

Smaller nursery trees establish more quickly in their new homes than larger ones, and usually outgrow them.

But you don't need to dig as deep as conventional wisdom has held. New research shows that tree roots take hold best in a cone-shaped planting hole only 2 to 3 times the diameter of the root ball, and no deeper than necessary to stand the plant at the same level as it stood at the nursery. Or higher, if a mound is needed for improved drainage. The shallow hole sets plants on a firm base of undisturbed soil that won’t settle with time.

The practice of dumping gravel or some other coarse material into the bottom of the planting hole to help drain away excess water is another dated notion. What results is the opposite of what was intended. A “perched” water table forms above the layer of gravel; it doesn’t drain until the upper layer becomes saturated.

Yet another myth that can be laid to rest is the recommendation to mix plenty of compost or other organic materials into the soil from the planting hole. The idea was to create a fluffy, rich substrate for the developing roots. But if you were a young root growing in such a place, would you ever want to leave? No. Spread compost and other organic materials on top of the ground as mulch.

PRUNING? STAKING?

No need to do a lot of work with your pruning tools either. Myth held that the tops of newly planted trees needed pruning to balance the loss of roots that occurred during transplanting. But many trees today are sold growing in containers, so they lose no roots at transplanting.

More important is that for every kind of nursery tree, the buds on stems, especially those near the tips, produce hormones that actually stimulate root growth. In general, limit any pruning to total removal of a few stems rather than lopping back many stems.

Once a tree is in the ground, staking is the traditional next order of business -- another practice needing reconsideration. Generally, don’t stake a tree unless it can’t support itself, if trunk movement causes the root ball to rock, or if wind might uproot the whole plant. Even then, support for any young tree should let the top move freely and allow for some wiggle of the trunk, all without causing abrasion where the tie or ties make contact.

The sooner the stake or stakes are removed, the sooner the plant can develop a strong trunk and root system. With most small trees, remove stakes after one year; larger trees might require stakes left in place for two years.

Watching year-to-year growth of a relatively small, young tree is satisfying. Before you know it, the tree will appear as a bold, beautiful and useful addition to the landscape.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Passengers Steal Headphones, Damage Screens On Tejas Express's 1st Mumbai-Goa Trip

Passengers Steal Headphones, Damage Screens On Tejas Express's 1st Mumbai-Goa Trip
The train came back littered, with fewer headphones and damaged infotainment screens, said railway sources

Passengers Steal Headphones, Damage Screens On Tejas Express's 1st Mumbai-Goa Trip

Oh No! Here Comes The Sun: Hot Calgary Playground Slide Too Hard On The Tush

Oh No! Here Comes The Sun: Hot Calgary Playground Slide Too Hard On The Tush
CALGARY — A popular Calgary playground has been forced to close for improvements because the sun is making metal slides too hot for kids to handle.

Oh No! Here Comes The Sun: Hot Calgary Playground Slide Too Hard On The Tush

Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next

Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next
Melania Trump wore a veil to the Vatican on Wednesday to meet the pope, but no head covering a few days earlier to meet the king of Saudi Arabia, a religiously conservative country where most women cover themselves up from head to toe.

Why Melania Trump Covers Her Head One Day And Not The Next

Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk

Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk
According to a Hindustan Times report, the painful scene unfolded on the morning of May 24 at Damoh in Madhya Pradesh. The woman lay lifeless along the railway tracks while her one year-old son lay clinging on to her chest, probably hungry. 

Heartbreaking Video Shows Toddler Desperately Trying To Wake Dead Mum Before Sucking At Her Milk

No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver

No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver
 33-year-old Janice Nicole Bryant died following a targeted shooting early Tuesday evening.

No Arrests As Woman Dies Following Targeted Shooting In East Vancouver

Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up

Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up
During the Commencement Ceremony at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, US, an Indian student, Gaurav Jhaveri, bowed down to touch his dean's feet after receiving his graduation degree. Watch the video below

Video: Indian Student Touches American Dean's Feet, Leaves Him Puzzled, Internet Cracks Up