tree planting and care

Page 1

Trees and Shrubs Jeremy Weber Butte-Silver Bow County MSU Extension Agent Spring 2012


Outline 

Why we plant trees  

How we plant trees  

Aesthetic, psychological, economic benefits Environmental benefits, energy savings

Planning Green side goes up

Take care of your trees, stupid! 

Pruning


Why We Plant Trees 

Visual Characteristics (The Stuff Your Neighbors Notice)      

Bark Flowers Branch Habit Foliage Fruit and Seed Seasonal interest


Why We Plant Trees  

PSYCHOLOGICAL

Greenscape reduces stress and ADHD symptoms  Arbor Day Foundation: More urban trees correlated with lower crime rates 

ECONOMIC

Pride of place  Tree care = Grant funding  Reduce stormwater load People enter stores more frequently and spend more in commercial districts with more trees 


Why We Plant Trees 

Environmental 

 

Reduced stormwater runoff Improved water quality Erosion control Air quality (filter particulate matter, reduce carbon)


Why We Plant Trees 

Energy Savings – reduce heating/cooling costs  

Shade buildings, cool by transpiration in summer Windbreak in winter


Visual Characteristics (The stuff your neighbors notice)      

Bark Flowers Branch Habit Foliage Fruit and Seed Seasonal Interest


Bark ď Ž

The outer covering of the trunk and branches of a tree, usually corky, papery or leathery.


Flowers


Branch Habit

ď Ž

Branch = a natural subdivision of a plant stem


Foliage


Fruit and Seed ď Ž

Fruit = the fully developed ovary of a flower, containing one or more seeds


Seasonal Interest


Uses in the Landscape     

Frame Background Corner Plantings Screen Shade

  

Windbreak Specimen Traffic  

Direction Stopping


Corner Plantings


Screen


Shade


Windbreak


Specimen   

The center of attention A focal point Used sparingly


Traffic


Plan Well – BEFORE You Plant


“Know What’s Below” 

It’s the law


Plan Ahead ď Ž

Anticipate Problems


Plan Ahead 

Like a puppy…

…consider the size of the mature tree.


Plants should be placed one-half of their mature spread and height from existing physical items

Or the mature size รท2 = the distance to plant away from buildings, houses, etc.


Right Tree, Right Place!


Right Tree, Right Place!


Right Tree, Right Place! ď Ž

Trees have many shapes to fit (or not fit) many spaces



Understanding Roots About 85% of a tree’s roots are within the top 18 inches of soil (75% in top 8” – 10”)


Understanding Roots Roots can spread 2 X the height of the tree in one direction from the trunk (or 1 ½ - 3 X the dripline)


32


Planting 

Planting = The act of placing plants (or plant parts) in the soil to encourage them to grow

Key phrase: “Go wide, not deep”


Types of Planting Stock


Bare Root 

Handle in dormant condition 

PROTECT ROOTS FROM DRYING! 

 

Best for deciduous plants Keep wrapped and moist

Inspect and remove damaged roots Best planted in spring


Containerized  

 

Pot of plastic or metal Should have welldeveloped root system in container Keep well watered in container Can plant throughout growing season


Balled – and – Burlapped 

Best if dormant, but in leaf OK  Keep soil ball moist  Protect foliage from wind Spring/Fall best planting time – okay in summer


How large should the root ball be? 

Rule of Thumb #1:  

10” – 12”of root ball for each 1” of trunk diameter Measured at 6” to 12” off the ground

Example: 4” diam. trunk = 3 ½’ – 4’ root ball

Rule of Thumb #2: 

A tree takes one year to establish for each inch of trunk diameter


How to Plant: Find the Root Flare ď Ž

ď Ž

The root flare (trunk flare, root crown) should be visible at the surface The place where the top-most root originates from the trunk will be just below this point


How to Plant: The Planting Hole 

Should be 2-3 X wider than the spread of roots but no deeper.

Roots should rest on undisturbed soil (to avoid settling)

Replace soil and gently tamp.

WATER IT IN!


How to Plant ď Ž

Let professionals handle the big ones


Planting Blueprint


How to Plant


How to Plant – Mulching 

Place 2-3 inches around tree. Do not mound the mulch against the trunk. Do not use solid black plastic under landscape rock or mulch – limits air and water to roots


How to Plant – Mulching Right

WRONG!


How to Plant – Tree Wrap 

Sometimes applied to trees with thin bark to protect against sunscald and frost crack

Apply when the leaves drop in fall

Remove when leaves appear in spring


How to Plant – Root Pruning 

Girdling Roots


Pruning ď Ž

Why do we prune trees?


Pruning ď Ž

Removes dead, diseased, and broken branches


Pruning ď Ž

Stimulates fruit and flower development


Pruning ď Ž

Decreases danger of personal injury and property damage


Pruning 

When to prune? 

If a tree or shrub flowers before the end of June, prune immediately after flowering.  

Flower buds form after flowering Pruning done before flowering removes buds

If the tree or shrub flowers after June 30, prune during dormancy or immediately before the new growth starts. 

Flower buds form beginning in early spring


Pruning ď Ž

When to prune? ď Ž

Evergreens can be pruned any time of year when the wood is not frozen, but fall is best


Pruning 

Every pruning cut is a wound 

Wounds allow infestation/infection/rot

TREES DON’T HEAL. THEY SEAL. 

Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees = CODIT





Pruning 

Prune only deciduous trees at planting (minimal pruning) At about 2 years: establish good branch spacing Goal: develop strong scaffold branch system 

Select wide crotch angles, branches spaced well around tree and vertically


Pruning ď Ž

Establish alternate and radial branching early


Pruning ď Ž

Do NOT remove the central leader


Pruning 

Remove branches with a narrow crotch Optimal attachment angle is 45º - 90º


Adapted from USDA Forest Service


Pruning ď Ž

In short, do not leave stubs.


Pruning ď Ž

Formal Hedges Year 2

Planting

Year 1

Year 3


Pruning ď Ž

Topiary


Know when to call a professional


Know when to quit


What not to do 

Don’t leave tree wrap on too long

This is damage from borers harbored under the wrap during the growing season


What not to do


What not to do


What not to do ď Ž

No root flare: planted too deep


How to Fix It 

This tree was 8” too deep in the root ball The top of the root ball was removed, and the tree was planted at the proper depth.


What not to do ď Ž

Pollarding

Topping


What not to do


What not to do ď Ž

Lion-tailing



What not to do


Resources 

International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) 

www.isa-arbor.com

National Arbor Day Foundation 

www.arborday.org


Montana State University Extension Jeremy Weber Extension Agent Butte-Silver Bow County 305 W Mercury St. Butte, MT 59701 (406) 723-0217 jweber@montana.edu



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