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Posts Tagged ‘root flare’

It has been a while since I’ve written about root flares. I got some photos from my friend Carl Cathcart the other day, showcasing the excavation of a hemlock root flare. This tree is one of a hedge of 7-8′ tall hemlocks planted two years ago. Its owner had noticed that while the hedge wasn’t [...]

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For those of you checking out this blog for the air-tool transplanting posts, you may find it helpful to read the comments on those posts for more information…And if you’re a landscape architect or arborist and have observations, questions, comments, please feel free to submit them in the comment box as well. This technology and [...]

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To continue the story from the previous post (check out the photos on that one): Wednesday, I had to visit Cavicchio’s Greenhouses to tag a tree. Carl and I arranged to meet there, and Carl called to see if Jake Cavicchio could meet us at the little pin oak. We bumped down a back road [...]

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If you have read the last post but are new to this blog you might take a look at this link; it’s my Lawn and Landscape article on the bare-root transplant workshop conducted last summer by arborists Mike Furgal (who developed the method of transplanting specimen trees bare-root, using an air spade) and Matt Foti [...]

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This past winter I developed plans for a couple of areas on the property belonging to my longest-standing and wonderfully enthusiastic clients, L. and A. on the North Shore. They have a lovely place on a rocky cliff overlooking Nahant Bay, and they enjoy making it even more beautiful and comfortable each year. They are [...]

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To avoid lengthening that last post any more, I’m posting a couple more photos of trees with buried root flares here. These are pear trees; in the first photo, you can see moss growing on the trunk just above what had been the root ball grade when the tree was planted. Beside the fact that [...]

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It just dawned on me that I haven’t written yet about something that I’ve seen more and more — on virtually all my projects for the last several years, in fact — with new trees being planted in the landscape.  It’s this:   Trees coming in from the growers these days (at least here on [...]

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