Whitewater
Attractive To Bees
Well . . .
Even though I know it's kind of early (I don't have the ability to start baby plants inside) to start thinking about getting my hands on some new plants, I couldn't help myself and started to cruise Ebay, looking for some cheap replacements for the raspberries that the blasted . . . rabbits? . . .squirrels? . . . ate right down to the ground last fall, before I noticed. I have no idea if they'll come back and so am planning for the worst.
I'm also looking to expand my strawberry patch -- I've got Honeoye, Ozark Beauty and All-Star, but only 2-3 plants per species. I'd like to add some Sure-Crop in the mix, which somebody right now is selling on Ebay. 25 plants for an astonishingly low price, I think it's something like $10 including shipping. And they'll hold them until spring, too, which is nice.
I'm not worried about getting rid of the extra plants, I can give them away on Craigslist or Freecycle or something, but what I am worried about is the fact that the seller will ship them bare-root.
Last summer I bought 12 Honeoye strawberry plants from Ebay and they were shipped bare-root, and all but one of them died. Actually, they all died but one actually came back to life in my patch after a couple weeks, believe it or not. And I don't know if the other 6 survived, I gave them away to friends.
Does anybody here know how to take care of bare-root plants immediately after shipping? I just planted the strawberries last year in those biodegradable pots, you know, potting them up like you would with young plants, because I didn't know any better.
Obviously, that's the wrong thing to do! Does anybody know how to properly care for bare root plants? I'd appreciate the information. I'd like to order 2-3 more Honeoye berry plants from nurseries and I suspect that they will ship them bare-root as well.
Whitewater
Even though I know it's kind of early (I don't have the ability to start baby plants inside) to start thinking about getting my hands on some new plants, I couldn't help myself and started to cruise Ebay, looking for some cheap replacements for the raspberries that the blasted . . . rabbits? . . .squirrels? . . . ate right down to the ground last fall, before I noticed. I have no idea if they'll come back and so am planning for the worst.
I'm also looking to expand my strawberry patch -- I've got Honeoye, Ozark Beauty and All-Star, but only 2-3 plants per species. I'd like to add some Sure-Crop in the mix, which somebody right now is selling on Ebay. 25 plants for an astonishingly low price, I think it's something like $10 including shipping. And they'll hold them until spring, too, which is nice.
I'm not worried about getting rid of the extra plants, I can give them away on Craigslist or Freecycle or something, but what I am worried about is the fact that the seller will ship them bare-root.
Last summer I bought 12 Honeoye strawberry plants from Ebay and they were shipped bare-root, and all but one of them died. Actually, they all died but one actually came back to life in my patch after a couple weeks, believe it or not. And I don't know if the other 6 survived, I gave them away to friends.
Does anybody here know how to take care of bare-root plants immediately after shipping? I just planted the strawberries last year in those biodegradable pots, you know, potting them up like you would with young plants, because I didn't know any better.
Obviously, that's the wrong thing to do! Does anybody know how to properly care for bare root plants? I'd appreciate the information. I'd like to order 2-3 more Honeoye berry plants from nurseries and I suspect that they will ship them bare-root as well.
Whitewater