So there was this lovely advert, apple trees £10 apiece, free P&P from the company, one weekend only, delivery sometime before April.
They arrived with no warning day before yesterday, bare rooted, still in leaf ! Freshly in leaf, perhaps. They look awfully fresh young leaves.
My problem is this: the ground outside is frozen, I cannot plant either one of them where they are to go. I don't even have compost or soil which will not be very chilly at present.
For the moment, they are in a hermetically sealed plastic bag, the roots are wrapped in another tightly sealed plastic wrapper. The instructions on what to do with my James Grieve M27s are sealed inside the big bag.
So what I'm wondering is, can I keep them inside their Wardian tomb, where presumably the moisture level is fine for them, or do I take them out and stick them in the hoary ground, hoping that they don't go into some kind of shock ? After all, don't they normally meet the opposite situation - cooling head while the feet are still warm, rather than active leaves and chilled roots ?
They arrived with no warning day before yesterday, bare rooted, still in leaf ! Freshly in leaf, perhaps. They look awfully fresh young leaves.
My problem is this: the ground outside is frozen, I cannot plant either one of them where they are to go. I don't even have compost or soil which will not be very chilly at present.
For the moment, they are in a hermetically sealed plastic bag, the roots are wrapped in another tightly sealed plastic wrapper. The instructions on what to do with my James Grieve M27s are sealed inside the big bag.
So what I'm wondering is, can I keep them inside their Wardian tomb, where presumably the moisture level is fine for them, or do I take them out and stick them in the hoary ground, hoping that they don't go into some kind of shock ? After all, don't they normally meet the opposite situation - cooling head while the feet are still warm, rather than active leaves and chilled roots ?
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