Thanks Max. Years working at a nursery helps so much when it comes to digging trees. It usually takes me 10 minutes or less to get a tree out of the ground.you've been busy, my friend!
Awesome
They seem pretty easy to collect and survive. I haven't had one die yet. We will see how these go. I hardly got any usable roots. It was growing in very loose sand.I really like.this one.
I read that Hawthorne is really hard to collect do to not taking well to the roots being mest with. Have.you had any problems with them? Or are they easy going?
It isn't too late here. I like the way this tree looks but it does need to be shorter I think. I left the branching on because there isn't much and it will look cool if it gets blooms this year. It did last year.wow thats a good one.
did you leave all the extra to help it recover / hedging against die back, or are you planning using all that in the design?
I have a nice trunk I dug in December last year and plunked it in my garden bed, starting to show buds up the trunk now.
have you gotten any hornbeam on your expeditions yet? seems like its too late to get them now, down here by me at least. All 5 of my hornbeam are alive and budding, but all had buds on them when they were collected, including one I dug in mid January, but its in the garden bed.
Both kinds.
I've never been able to tell the difference. Got an easy way for me to pick it up??
This is a Hops hornbeam. I don't have a picture of American but they are rarely over 8" in diameter. They they are under story trees. They live under larger decidious trees that like wetter areas like white ash,bambigiglian (swamp popel) and black willow. They have thin grey bark almost like a beech. They have muscular looking trunks and fine twigs.I've never been able to tell the difference. Got an easy way for me to pick it up??
I collected mine as Zach advised on his blog. All mine survived and have buds popping. Some in process, while others have young branches now.