
Knowing how colorfully bulbs will eventually bloom can initially make planting them disappointing, since there is nothing to see for all the effort. Planting bare root plants is not much more rewarding. The bare stems are a bit more proof of the effort, but will do nothing until they break dormancy in spring. Now that Christmas trees have vacated nurseries, bare root plants will be arriving, and will need to be planted before winter ends.
As the name implies, bare root plants have bare roots, without the soil they were grown in. Better equipped nurseries ‘heel in’ bare root plants in moist sand, which simply means that the roots get buried temporarily. When purchased, the plants get pulled from the sand and wrapped for the trip to their new home garden, where they get planted permanently into real soil.
Alternatively, bare root plants can be prepackaged in bags of moist sawdust. They only need to be removed from their packaging and sawdust before getting planted into the garden. Mail order plants, including plants purchased online, often get packaged even more simply, with a damp bag around the roots, maybe with a bit of gel or damp paper. The plants are safely dormant, so are not even aware of what is going on.
The main advantage of bare root plants is that they cost about a third of what typical nursery stock in heavier cans of media (soil) cost. Because they are so much less cumbersome, several bare root plants can be purchased at a time, and brought home in a small car without much effort. Since they lack the luxury of the soil they were grown in, they immediately disperse their roots directly into the surrounding soil.
Roots of bare root plants should be spread away from each other at planting. Soil amendment is nice, but should not be so copious that roots will not want to disperse outside of the amended soil. Even if rain is expected, newly planted bare root plants should initially get soaked so that soil settles around the roots. Grafted plants should be planted with the graft union above grade.
Fruit trees such as apricot, cherry, plum, prune, peach, nectarine, almond, apple and pear, as well as roses, are the most popular of bare root plants. Flowering crabapple, flowering cherry, poplar, willow, lilac, forsythia, wisteria and grape are also available.
Anyone who has worked with plants understands that bare roots offer great value, but I can see why they appear daunting to people who have never used them.
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Many people do not trust them, and believe that canned stock is better because it comes with more roots. I find that it comes with more problems too.
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Love the bare roots! So affordable we are restoring a forest with bare root native trees and shrubs.
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Bare root is not popular on the West Coast of California. Most of us want canned stock. I will probably grow native sycamores for bare root installation as street trees in Los Angeles, but I know people there will be skeptical.
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I have planted lots of bare root P. occidentalis, one of the easiest. For that matter, in the wetlands here I can just shove a twig of it in the soil and it will grow. Most people I know are not very familiar with bare root plants either – I discovered them of necessity, having no planting budget.
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Even with a good budget, it is best to not be wasteful. Some plants are worth purchasing as canned stock. Others get established more efficiently as bare root stock.
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Bare roots do require a certain ability to defer gratification. I’ll admit I like buying big leafy plants already in bloom, even if you’re really not getting more plant for your money.
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I actually purchased a canned persimmon trees, just because the branch structure was so exemplary. They are expensive even as bare root, so the canned tree did not cost too much more.
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