so..... after 2 years in the planning, site clearance, choosing varieties etc, the 4 fruit trees were delivered today (2 x apple, 2 x plum). The advice I'd read was NOT to pre-dig the whole in case it fills with water. So I dug them today, and of course they immediately filled with water from the recent heavy rain.
I've stored the trees at the back of the shed for the moment but now have a terrible feeling about drainage, and would welcome the experience of other people on the forum.
I'm fairly sure the ground water will subside in a day or two, but it has shown me that the ground is more prone to partial flooding then I'd previously suspected. Can I sufficiently improve drainage just by digging lots of sand etc into the hole the tree (bare root) goes into, or do I need to dig a sump/drainaway/pond? My concern with the latter is that water respects no boundaries and effectively all water (from the whole allotment site) will (literally) gravitate towards it, and as such I could never dig one that was really big enough.
Any thoughts or tips would be welcome.
I've stored the trees at the back of the shed for the moment but now have a terrible feeling about drainage, and would welcome the experience of other people on the forum.
I'm fairly sure the ground water will subside in a day or two, but it has shown me that the ground is more prone to partial flooding then I'd previously suspected. Can I sufficiently improve drainage just by digging lots of sand etc into the hole the tree (bare root) goes into, or do I need to dig a sump/drainaway/pond? My concern with the latter is that water respects no boundaries and effectively all water (from the whole allotment site) will (literally) gravitate towards it, and as such I could never dig one that was really big enough.
Any thoughts or tips would be welcome.
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