Hi everyone. I'm new to this forum and mainly joined because I want to grow my own fruit. I have a question about my fruit trees. I planted them out a couple of weeks ago, and they seemed to be doing okay initially. However, I'm now seeing a few young leaves turning brown. I may be overreacting, and it might not be anything at all, but just wanted to get some expert opinions.
Here's the background:
I bought a patio fruit tree collection from Thompson & Morgan (dwarf trees: 2 apple trees (gala, golden delicious), 1 cherry, 1 pear, 1 plum). They arrived just before the Beast from the East hit us, so I kept them inside in the 9cm pots they came in. About 2 weeks ago, I planted them out in larger pots (50ltrs).
I used the soil from my garden that my husband and I have been trying to amend. It was heavy clay and we added horse manure compost, chicken manure compost, some top soil, and a bit of ericaceous compost.
The horse manure compost was well-rotted when we got it. Moreover, it was kept in a bag for quite a few months before we put it in the soil.
Similarly, the chicken manure compost was also sitting in bags for a few months before we added it to the soil. It was, however, slightly stinky. I am not sure if this is normal or if it means it wasn't completely composted.
We added both of these to the soil in February and mixed it all up quite well. So it had a month to settle in.
I am getting worried that the compost might not have been very well-rotted. Can it hurt the trees, if it isn't? Should I leave the trees in that soil or should I move them out?
Thanks!
Here's the background:
I bought a patio fruit tree collection from Thompson & Morgan (dwarf trees: 2 apple trees (gala, golden delicious), 1 cherry, 1 pear, 1 plum). They arrived just before the Beast from the East hit us, so I kept them inside in the 9cm pots they came in. About 2 weeks ago, I planted them out in larger pots (50ltrs).
I used the soil from my garden that my husband and I have been trying to amend. It was heavy clay and we added horse manure compost, chicken manure compost, some top soil, and a bit of ericaceous compost.
The horse manure compost was well-rotted when we got it. Moreover, it was kept in a bag for quite a few months before we put it in the soil.
Similarly, the chicken manure compost was also sitting in bags for a few months before we added it to the soil. It was, however, slightly stinky. I am not sure if this is normal or if it means it wasn't completely composted.
We added both of these to the soil in February and mixed it all up quite well. So it had a month to settle in.
I am getting worried that the compost might not have been very well-rotted. Can it hurt the trees, if it isn't? Should I leave the trees in that soil or should I move them out?
Thanks!
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