Transplanting Garden Trees in Autumn
There may come a time when you need to do some transplanting. Perhaps your plants and trees have been in pots, but now they need to be planted in your garden. The best time to transplant trees or any plant is when the ground is soft and full of nutrients. At the beginning of spring you need to use more nutrients during the planting season because the ground has been frozen for several months due to winter. Still, spring has been a notorious season for planting new plants and trees.
A much better season for replanting, transplanting, or planting a new tree is autumn. The ground is filled with nutrients from the dying leaves and summer growing season. At this time your garden trees will be at their maximum with nutrients in the roots. Your ground will also be more ready to receive a new plant and help it grow. When planting in autumn, you cannot neglect your plant. You still need to give it attention such as trimming and watering.
Instant hedging tools make it possible to keep your trees and other plants trimmed properly. You may be aware that trimming back your plants and trees allows for new growth, even some healthy growth.
Even if you are not transplanting any trees or plants, you should be aware that you have to hedge before the winter season arrives. It provides plenty of time for the tree to recover and get ready for the dormant season. If you leave your bushes or evergreen shrubs grow without trimming you will have a wild looking bush, which eventually becomes unhealthy.
It can become unhealthy because the old growth is not taken care of. Roses are a good example of trimming back. Rose bushes usually have to be trimmed each year in order to keep them growing uniform and producing roses each new season.
Gardening takes a lot of care. You have to be willing to provide the care your garden requires otherwise your plants will eventually die out and money is wasted on the plants and trees. There does come a time for some of the trees and plants to grow on their own. After all, some of the plants and trees do well in nature without a trimmer going about. However, these tend to be hardier species growing in a wealth of nutrient soil, whereas your garden is specialised.