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Three year old tree, made from "North Pole" scion . 10.6.18 |
Last year,
I transplanted a columnar apple tree that I had started on a sucker from a dwarf or semidwarf apple tree, which I had cut down some time before that. Despite the lost of significant, if not most, of the roots, that tree survived the winter, bloomed, and I allowed a few apples to develop. The growth was less than for an established tree, but there was actual new growth, and the tree appears to be becoming established.
Today, I moved the sibling of that tree, and another older, much larger, columnar apple tree.
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Above tree, replanted. 10.6.18 |
The first was a tree from the same scion source (North Pole Apple), and root stock, as the above tree. However, I had transplanted this one when it was smaller, and it had enough time to establish that there were more than a dozen large apples that I collected today. The location is inconvenient for deer fencing, so I decided to move it. I tried to get all of the roots that I could. I think this has a better root ball than the previous tree, so it should survive.
The second was a Golden Sentinel tree that I planted in 2012. This tree is much taller and larger biomass. Again, I tried to get the most roots that I could, but losses were significant for the amount of tree. From what I've read, we should not attempt to prune back to "match" the roots, but leave as much top as we can. I did remove about the top 3 feet, and some of the side branches.
Because the second tree is top heavy, I also planted 3 fence posts and tied the tree loosely to the posts.
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Six Year Old "Golden Sentinel" Columnar Apple Tree. 10.6.18 |
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Above Columnar Apple, Replanted. 10.6.18 |
After the leaves are lost, I intend to prune back the branches and spurs,
to match the ideal columnar shape. That will be in a month or two.
I'm optimistic these trees will survive, despite root loss. I've moved several apple trees that were similar age and had similar losses, and all survived. They will need generous watering next year.
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