Hi all! Got a quick question about tree planting as I'm doing the prep today for when they arrive this week and ideally don't want to kill em if I can help it! Done a fair bit of reading to try and work out what would work, but wanted to check it with experts before jamming the poor things into my garden.
The trees are an M9 rootstock and are apple trees. They are being planted in effectively an open bottomed raised bed (around a foot tall) which will be stood on a heavy clay soil. What I was planning to do was fill the bed with a mix of topsoil and shop bought compost and stamp it down a bit to reduce the level dropping over time as much as possible, before digging the hole to plant in.
What I am unsure on, however, is whether putting a layer of topsoil and sand on top of the clay first will be helpful, or whether to add some well rotted manure right into the bottom as well in the hope that the worms will mix the clay, sand, topsoil and manure in a bit before the tree roots get there, thus helping it root deeper? The bed is a wide one, so there is a risk, as I understand it, that if I cannot encourage the roots to go into the clay then the trees will become shallow rooted? I am not able to dig much at the moment either, so digging a lot in the clay below the bed isn't a massive option.
I'm also planning to be good and pull off all the fruit that sets and plant chives and nasturtiums around them to help with bugs.
The trees are an M9 rootstock and are apple trees. They are being planted in effectively an open bottomed raised bed (around a foot tall) which will be stood on a heavy clay soil. What I was planning to do was fill the bed with a mix of topsoil and shop bought compost and stamp it down a bit to reduce the level dropping over time as much as possible, before digging the hole to plant in.
What I am unsure on, however, is whether putting a layer of topsoil and sand on top of the clay first will be helpful, or whether to add some well rotted manure right into the bottom as well in the hope that the worms will mix the clay, sand, topsoil and manure in a bit before the tree roots get there, thus helping it root deeper? The bed is a wide one, so there is a risk, as I understand it, that if I cannot encourage the roots to go into the clay then the trees will become shallow rooted? I am not able to dig much at the moment either, so digging a lot in the clay below the bed isn't a massive option.
I'm also planning to be good and pull off all the fruit that sets and plant chives and nasturtiums around them to help with bugs.
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