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Tips on Caring for and Feeding Garden Trees
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When
trees grow naturally in the forest, the leaves fall around them, decay
and form a good soil. The leaves also preserve moisture in the soil.
On a lawn, however, the tree must compete with the grass for moisture
and nutrients, and the leaves are raked up to prevent grass disorders,
so that the successful gardener finds it wise to supply nutrients every
two or three years.
Feeding should be done when the ground is workable, in the spring or in
the fall.A difficult but worthwhile method of feeding is to strip the
sod from an area all around the tree extending at least 2 to 3 feet
beyond the outer branches, since the root system extends this far.
Apply stable or barnyard manure to this area, spreading it 3 inches
thick and digging it in. Then firm the soil, rake it level and return
the sod.
An easier method is to drill holes over the same area, 12 to 18 inches
deep and spaced about 15 inches apart. Fill each hole with a commercial
fertilizer (made up of bone meal, tankage, peat moss or humus) plus
chemicals, in a formula containing 10% nitrogen, 6% phosphoric acid and
4% potash.
Because of the transpiration of a tree, especially in the hot days of
summer, lawn and specimen trees must be watered at least every 10 days
in summer to avoid trouble. Since the roots are deep, light watering
won't do. The hose or sprinkler should be used for at least an hour.
If the soil is hard packed, loosen it with a fork. For a large tree,
drive or bore a number of 1 1/2 inch holes 3 to 5 inches deep and 3
feet apart, below the outer branches. Use a canvas hose or cover the
hose with a gunny sack and let the water run.
When planting new trees or small trees, if you put a few pieces of
drain tile in the hole and put the hose in these, you can insure the
water reaching the subsoil. Cover the drain-tile holes with stones to
avoid evaporation.
Certain trees will not live long if a fill of soil is laid over their
roots, or if a terrace of blacktop, stone, brick or concrete paving
blocks is laid over their feeding roots. Large, valuable trees should
be protected with drain tile so that they will get water and air. The
bark should be protected from dirt from a fill directly against it. You
can buy metal tree wells, 3 to 7 feet across and 1 to 3 feet high, or
build a masonry wall.
The wall can be capped with a circle of bricks or a low wall to make an
extra seat on the terrace. If you have some surface other than sod or
earth around the tree, see that it does not extend as far as the tree's
outer feeding roots, and leave a circle of natural soil around the
trunk. This can be planted.
Care for your trees as injuries occur rather than wait to call in a
tree surgeon and allow a weakened spot to remain untreated. Remove all
dead, decayed, diseased or injured bark.
Do this by removing the entire limb, or, on a large limb or trunk, dig
out the decayed matter, sterilizing and waterproofing the cut surfaces
with creosote and liquid tar.
White lead or paint is not as good to use as it will not seal when used
on damp surfaces. Fill deep wounds with concrete. Use pruning hooks
carefully, avoiding bruises.
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