My experience is not great but I tend to do a lot of research and am no stranger to complexity and scientific detail.
Images below.
So right on to it.
Once upon a time next door had a wonderful pair of trees, then Mr chainsaw came over for lunch and now.. well I guess next door didn’t care for all that wonderful jam! A sad moment. But not all lost, the tree sent out runners and my lawn (that I rarely cut cos wild fler are awesome!) was/still is, full of saplings! Happy day!
I let them ‘enlarge’, moved some into pots and since even managed to go from pot back into the lawn in a slightly better location. I also have a few that are probably 2 years at a guess so they actually resemble trees – luckily they grew in the right place.
Well that’s the story anyway, none of the potted ones are over a year old and I still have a few popping up in the lawn!
The tree produced small fruits probably around 50p size max from memory, so assuming dramsons.. but not sure.
I’m located in the middle of derby, clay.. clay.. yup very clay, horrifically bad drainage clay, not the best soil for anything.
Now to the issue.
My sister is visiting this weekend and I want to give her a few for her garden down in Suffolk. The conditions are considerably different clay vs loose sandy well drained soil, middle of England vs right on the coast. So I had intended to give her the ones I had potted in compost Fig2 rather than just more clay Fig1 since I have heard that’s likely to be considerably less stressful on the tree. It’s also a 4 hour drive in a hot car! \o.o/
However, the compost in the compost pot has shrunk down so it may be lacking room for its toes, I see roots out the bottom of the makeshift pot. And the leaves are considerably different fig2 from the clay pot trees fig1 I have.
I considered a lack of a required nutrient in either or simply pot bound, but haven’t managed to identify anything specific to growing plumbs. Or possibly the one pot became diseased? Or there could be something left over from inside the grouting pot I used having a negative effect on the tree? The compost pot ones also grew more similarly to the cherries I ‘think’ I have fig3, more up than bushy making me question a little what I’d put in the pot lol! I say ‘think’ since the cherries popped up some distance from the cherry trees. Feel free to confirm that for me fig3 X3.
But anyway, I want to give her whatever has the best chance of survival and producing fruit, so compost pot fig2 or the clay pot fig1?
Am I also right in thinking it takes 3 years for them to produce anything – requiring 2 year old growth to grow fruit on in the next year?
I seem to have endless plum/cherry question lately, but I’ll leave it there since I have 2-3 days to work this out lol! Any advice I could pass on to her for planting out would also be welcomed.
Thanks
Images
Fig1: Evenly coloured leaves, a little more bushy over all.
Fig2: Much darker veins by comparison to the leafs flesh, giving a much more textured appearance. The photo has under exaggerated this effect due to use of flash in low light.
Fig3: Cherry?
Images below.
So right on to it.
Once upon a time next door had a wonderful pair of trees, then Mr chainsaw came over for lunch and now.. well I guess next door didn’t care for all that wonderful jam! A sad moment. But not all lost, the tree sent out runners and my lawn (that I rarely cut cos wild fler are awesome!) was/still is, full of saplings! Happy day!
I let them ‘enlarge’, moved some into pots and since even managed to go from pot back into the lawn in a slightly better location. I also have a few that are probably 2 years at a guess so they actually resemble trees – luckily they grew in the right place.
Well that’s the story anyway, none of the potted ones are over a year old and I still have a few popping up in the lawn!
The tree produced small fruits probably around 50p size max from memory, so assuming dramsons.. but not sure.
I’m located in the middle of derby, clay.. clay.. yup very clay, horrifically bad drainage clay, not the best soil for anything.
Now to the issue.
My sister is visiting this weekend and I want to give her a few for her garden down in Suffolk. The conditions are considerably different clay vs loose sandy well drained soil, middle of England vs right on the coast. So I had intended to give her the ones I had potted in compost Fig2 rather than just more clay Fig1 since I have heard that’s likely to be considerably less stressful on the tree. It’s also a 4 hour drive in a hot car! \o.o/
However, the compost in the compost pot has shrunk down so it may be lacking room for its toes, I see roots out the bottom of the makeshift pot. And the leaves are considerably different fig2 from the clay pot trees fig1 I have.
I considered a lack of a required nutrient in either or simply pot bound, but haven’t managed to identify anything specific to growing plumbs. Or possibly the one pot became diseased? Or there could be something left over from inside the grouting pot I used having a negative effect on the tree? The compost pot ones also grew more similarly to the cherries I ‘think’ I have fig3, more up than bushy making me question a little what I’d put in the pot lol! I say ‘think’ since the cherries popped up some distance from the cherry trees. Feel free to confirm that for me fig3 X3.
But anyway, I want to give her whatever has the best chance of survival and producing fruit, so compost pot fig2 or the clay pot fig1?
Am I also right in thinking it takes 3 years for them to produce anything – requiring 2 year old growth to grow fruit on in the next year?
I seem to have endless plum/cherry question lately, but I’ll leave it there since I have 2-3 days to work this out lol! Any advice I could pass on to her for planting out would also be welcomed.
Thanks
Images
Fig1: Evenly coloured leaves, a little more bushy over all.
Fig2: Much darker veins by comparison to the leafs flesh, giving a much more textured appearance. The photo has under exaggerated this effect due to use of flash in low light.
Fig3: Cherry?
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