A little tree planting journey

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
Willows are happy.
20240520_200750.jpg

Started the pawpaw tree project. 1 has leafed out, other 4 haven't, so idk if they're dead or what yet. Will stick them in the ground and see what happens.
20240521_125156.jpg
 
Last edited:

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
First one planted.
FB_IMG_1718586319208.jpg
 

SPedigrees

Garden Addicted
Joined
Jun 9, 2018
Messages
838
Reaction score
2,663
Points
237
Location
Vermont, USA (zone 4)
You live in a lovely spot. Will your horses and cattle be in with these trees? (We never had any luck growing trees when out horses were living, save a few outside their pasture.) Your three post tree cage is identical to those I built for my spruce seedlings 5 years ago. I had about 50% success rate with those trees, but a better outcome than those we planted earlier with no protective cages. They ended up as deer snacks!
 

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
You live in a lovely spot. Will your horses and cattle be in with these trees? (We never had any luck growing trees when out horses were living, save a few outside their pasture.) Your three post tree cage is identical to those I built for my spruce seedlings 5 years ago. I had about 50% success rate with those trees, but a better outcome than those we planted earlier with no protective cages. They ended up as deer snacks!

They're all fenced off from everyone, horse, sheep, cow, wild deer. They'd be gone overnight otherwise.

All are on irrigation for 2yrs or longer. They'd all be dead or struggling otherwise. I don't want to waste all that time and energy growing, planting and protecting them just to die of thirst.
 

Shades-of-Oregon

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jul 22, 2024
Messages
879
Reaction score
2,547
Points
145
IMG_0933.jpegIMG_1167.png

The past year all of a sudden gophers and moles have turned the pastures ito a wack a mole board literally..

With traps and spraying the pasture to eliminate food for gophers and worms from moles and to eliminate toxic weeds from live stalk was recommended by the agricultural dept at the university of Oregon the pastures are all clean up no more ground critters. Except ground squirrels and it seems ag mint Spey deters them.
 

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
View attachment 67260View attachment 67261

The past year all of a sudden gophers and moles have turned the pastures ito a wack a mole board literally..

With traps and spraying the pasture to eliminate food for gophers and worms from moles and to eliminate toxic weeds from live stalk was recommended by the agricultural dept at the university of Oregon the pastures are all clean up no more ground critters. Except ground squirrels and it seems ag mint Spey deters them.
Did you mean to post that here?
 

Shades-of-Oregon

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jul 22, 2024
Messages
879
Reaction score
2,547
Points
145
I guess it was in reference to pasture areas how gophers can eat tree roots and kill trees . Not sure if gophers or even ground squirrels are in the pasture area… trees are tiny well protected from above ground critters.
In closing moles, voles , mice can also eat tree roots. I usually put blood-meal around newly planted trees to protect the roots. I hope that helps.
 
Last edited:

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
I guess it was in reference to pasture areas how gophers can eat tree roots and kill trees . Not sure if gophers or even ground squirrels are in the pasture area… trees are tiny well protected from above ground critters.
In closing moles, voles , mice can also eat tree roots. I usually put blood-meal around newly planted trees to protect the roots. I hope that helps.
Ohh, okay. I was very lost. :hide
The pawpaw trees were in pots, so no chance of predators. They just failed to leaf out this year. If they don't leaf out next year or I test branches and they're all brittle, I'll toss them and buy new to plant immediately.
 

Shades-of-Oregon

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jul 22, 2024
Messages
879
Reaction score
2,547
Points
145
I cannot begin to tell you how many plants have been lost to ground critters . Around the PNW gophers are a real menace, as well as other ground critters. Some years the pastures look like an 500 hole mini golf course. Also deer… 🥴. Nothing worse in my garden than a gopher chomping down on fav tree and shrubs that have been cared for and protected from insects and ice storms in winters …then boom a gopher sets up camp , moves in and starts to close in on meals with my fav plants. They set up watch stations and tunnels to throw the gardener off. Yet I declare war and break out my weapons of mass destruction. Soon they are out waving white flags surrendering. They have cost hundreds in damages.
I real pain in the caboose.
 

secuono

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
2,227
Reaction score
2,039
Points
317
Location
VA
I cannot begin to tell you how many plants have been lost to ground critters . Around the PNW gophers are a real menace, as well as other ground critters. Some years the pastures look like an 500 hole mini golf course. Also deer… 🥴. Nothing worse in my garden than a gopher chomping down on fav tree and shrubs that have been cared for and protected from insects and ice storms in winters …then boom a gopher sets up camp , moves in and starts to close in on meals with my fav plants. They set up watch stations and tunnels to throw the gardener off. Yet I declare war and break out my weapons of mass destruction. Soon they are out waving white flags surrendering. They have cost hundreds in damages.
I real pain in the caboose.
First 2 years here there were groundhogs. Tunnels. Got my first LGD, she took care of them. Didn't kill, just flung them and scared them tf away!
Have a video of her flinging one and telling it to gtfo!
 
Top