j evans
Omono
Here is the azalea that I posted about digging back in April. I dug it a couple of weeks ago with the intention of getting it into a five gallon nursery pot just slipping into something for the time being. I made a couple of slices with the shovel over several weeks to ready it for its removal. When I dug the bush there wasn't much there as for roots. It seems that when it was planted they put black plastic fairly tightly around the base of the bush then as the years went by soil built up on top of the plastic. This caused some roots on the lower end and then a mass of fine roots in another layer at the top of the root ball. When I got home I really didn't have enough of a root ball for the pot but a wider root mass that fit into a 18" bowl with some, not a lot of room for growth. The plant seems to be enjoying its new home with putting out some new leaves since it has been receiving regular water and some fertilizer. I have been watching almost everyone whack their azaleas down to lumps and having them sprout back to life. I would like to drastically reduce this but due to its poor lifestyle choices in the past, the limited amount of roots and our extreme heat (105+/- today) I am thinking that I am better waiting until later. Are these best to do in the spring or can I get away with doing some reduction in the fall in order to make this a bit more manageable size wise to overwinter?



