Help - Picea Abies Sapling

bhacktus

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Good morning,

I have been growing this Picea Abies, pictured below, from sapling for about 2 years now. The plant still resides in its original peat pot and soil, but I worry about its slow growth progress over the last year and its leaf coloration now. I haven't had a stable place to put it outside, but I could supplement by leaving it on a window sill in an unheated vestibule with the window open (even through winter). I am considering repotting the plant this spring to a more stable pot that might lend itself to being outside. I've also read that Picea Abies responds best to a mix of 33-33-33 lava rock, akadama, and pumice.

Is repotting at this stage a good idea? Is switching the plant from organic to better draining soil a good idea?

I haven't been able to find many resources dealing with saplings at this stage so any help you could provide would be greatly appreciated! Please let me know your thoughts! Thank you!
 

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Just give it as much sun and close to an outdoor environment as possible. If it hasn’t doubled in size in the next two weeks, I think you got a runt.
FD54A6D0-EE9A-45CF-A772-8229B4E1CE7B.jpeg
This one is 2 yrs old. Waiting for it to burst those buds soon!
 
@bhacktus
I do believe you when you say your seedling Picea abies is 2 years old. Picea are outdoor trees, and the lack of growth is in part due to being too "sheltered" from the environment it is adapted to, outdoors. It should be closer to the size of the seedlings in @Eckhoffw photos by now.

If you can, repot to the the lava-pumice-akadama mix, or even a plain old potting soil mix. Then get this seedling outdoors, into full sun if possible. Actually, step it into full sun, 2 weeks in full shade, then 2 weeks in half sun, then move to full sun. Lack of full sun is at least part of the reason this seedling is so small.

Through most of North America, you can leave this seedling out all winter. Spruces, Picea, need a very cold winter rest. Lack of growth can also be due to being kept too warm during winter. They need at least 120 days of temperatures below 4 C or below 40 F to meet their winter dormancy requirements.

So I would repot as soon as possible, and set it outside.

If you are an apartment dweller, and don't have an outdoor vegetable plot or outdoor garden space, I am afraid this tree is doomed. It will never adapt and grow in an indoor set up.
 
@bhacktus
I do believe you when you say your seedling Picea abies is 2 years old. Picea are outdoor trees, and the lack of growth is in part due to being too "sheltered" from the environment it is adapted to, outdoors. It should be closer to the size of the seedlings in @Eckhoffw photos by now.

If you can, repot to the the lava-pumice-akadama mix, or even a plain old potting soil mix. Then get this seedling outdoors, into full sun if possible. Actually, step it into full sun, 2 weeks in full shade, then 2 weeks in half sun, then move to full sun. Lack of full sun is at least part of the reason this seedling is so small.

Through most of North America, you can leave this seedling out all winter. Spruces, Picea, need a very cold winter rest. Lack of growth can also be due to being kept too warm during winter. They need at least 120 days of temperatures below 4 C or below 40 F to meet their winter dormancy requirements.

So I would repot as soon as possible, and set it outside.

If you are an apartment dweller, and don't have an outdoor vegetable plot or outdoor garden space, I am afraid this tree is doomed. It will never adapt and grow in an indoor set up.

Thank you very much for the thoughtful reply! I will give it my best shot to save this little guy from my ignorance!
 
Just give it as much sun and close to an outdoor environment as possible. If it hasn’t doubled in size in the next two weeks, I think you got a runt.
View attachment 299282
This one is 2 yrs old. Waiting for it to burst those buds soon!
By the way, your wires seem to be biting. Be careful. When wires bite in, they can take a lot of bark with them in spruces. Never let them bite.
 
By the way, your wires seem to be biting. Be careful. When wires bite in, they can take a lot of bark with them in spruces. Never let them bite.
I’m. Going to leave them in. P. Chan inspired.
 
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