Mike Corazzi
Masterpiece
This is a poser. It's a VERY old procumbens that was originally a mass of nursery stock.
Years ago I cut out a lot and it has done OK.
But.... I wanted to change pots this year. And when I took the root ball out of the old pot, there were only tiny tiny roots.
I created a thread and was told that junipers oddly don't NEED big white roots.
It seems to be doing fine except when I water I am getting a LOT of wicking up the trunk and wonder if that's ok or if it will moosh up and rot.
I try not to water ON the roots. Sometimes I do though.
You can see the wicking in the yellow circle.
As an experiment, i'm trying a soak in water only up to where the roots showed when I repotted. Thinking maybe without a huge soak the nebari would stay drier.
Illustration of the soak I'm talking about in diagram.
The other pix should be self explanatory with the whole tree pic showing where the wicking USUALLY goes.
and the larger pic of the nebari and roots shows how using this NEW method, it is already wicking into the dry part.
Any suggestions?
Years ago I cut out a lot and it has done OK.
But.... I wanted to change pots this year. And when I took the root ball out of the old pot, there were only tiny tiny roots.
I created a thread and was told that junipers oddly don't NEED big white roots.
It seems to be doing fine except when I water I am getting a LOT of wicking up the trunk and wonder if that's ok or if it will moosh up and rot.
I try not to water ON the roots. Sometimes I do though.
You can see the wicking in the yellow circle.
As an experiment, i'm trying a soak in water only up to where the roots showed when I repotted. Thinking maybe without a huge soak the nebari would stay drier.
Illustration of the soak I'm talking about in diagram.
The other pix should be self explanatory with the whole tree pic showing where the wicking USUALLY goes.
and the larger pic of the nebari and roots shows how using this NEW method, it is already wicking into the dry part.
Any suggestions?