You might want to put some rocks or something on the fabric to hold down. Wind will get under an make a mess.Finished yesterday planting 3 areas of hybrid bucky poplars. Followed John's recommendations on the longest strip, but planted a little denser on the 2 shorter strips. View attachment 5345View attachment 5346 View attachment 5347
Fabric is held down with staples.You might want to put some rocks or something on the fabric to hold down. Wind will get under an make a mess.
I will post pics at later growth(hopefully). I have about 25 left that I am going to just stick in the ground in a couple of areas that I want to take a shot of thickening up. I don't know what to expect with that.Keep us posted on growth, that's next on my list of projects.
Yea I wouldn't dare plant them this late in my sand.Water the living day lights out of them!
Back before the days of circle irrigators on every other 40 up there, I wouldn't have been so sure bueller. If you could have got an 8' cutting buried 7' in that sand, just the depth of your water table might have been enough for those willows to do fine, even this late or later. Since the upper level sands of that whole aquifer get sucked dry every summer now irrigating corn instead of supplying deep rooted trees with water, I think you are correct, you would have no chance.Yea I wouldn't dare plant them this late in my sand.
Speaking of irrigation, a system was just installed on the field 1/2 mile north of me this year. This field has been farmed forever without irrigation but not anymore.Back before the days of circle irrigators on every other 40 up there, I wouldn't have been so sure bueller. If you could have got an 8' cutting buried 7' in that sand, just the depth of your water table might have been enough for those willows to do fine, even this late or later. Since the upper level sands of that whole aquifer get sucked dry every summer now irrigating corn instead of supplying deep rooted trees with water, I think you are correct, you would have no chance.
I have fairly heavy clay. I was concerned about a killing freeze where I am. I'm glad I didn't plant earlier as we did get to 26 for a good portion of the night just a couple days ago. May not have hurt them if they had been in.Yea I wouldn't dare plant them this late in my sand.
I'm hoping we have enough variety to give them to keep the browsing down, but I expect some loss.You'll probably have more issues with browsing than wind if you have any deer in the area. I planted 25 hp Bucky in 2011. The deer left them alone until August then decided they were worth eating. They were anywhere from 3-6' tall by then. I only had a couple smaller blocks planted so I put some 5' fence around them. After the following year they were tall enough to remove the fence. I planted 400 in 2012 and basically depended on volume, although I caged the outside row with mesh tubes.
Finished yesterday planting 3 areas of hybrid bucky poplars. Followed John's recommendations on the longest strip, but planted a little denser on the 2 shorter strips. View attachment 5345View attachment 5346 View attachment 5347