Gabler
Masterpiece
When I was a kid, my dad taught me the best time to transplant a tree is in the middle of winter, when the tree is asleep. In my mind, I rationalized it as similar to surgery on a human. I’d rather be asleep/unconscious. Of course, he was speaking of trees in the ground where the roots would be protected from frost.
When I bought a book on bonsai trees when I was eleven or twelve years old, the book insisted there is a narrow acceptable window for repotting just as the tree is beginning to wake up in the spring. That’s proven to be the conventional wisdom amongst bonsai practitioners.
Subsequent books mentioned a caveat: that azaleas get repotted in the summer To promote bloom. The books alluded to special care for the summer-repotted trees, but didn’t offer much insight into what that might entail.
Then I learned that it is acceptable also to repot in the fall as a tree is going dormant, but before there is a risk of a hard freeze. I tried it myself and observed that the tree was weaker in spring but stronger by summer, though I’m sure results vary wildly between species and climates.
Lately, I’ve seen more frequent recommendations for summer repots, including for pines and maples. While I suspect that summer repots are not wise in a particularly hot and dry climate, are there advantages in certain climates? With certain species? With certain stages of development? Would someone with more experience please weigh in?
When I bought a book on bonsai trees when I was eleven or twelve years old, the book insisted there is a narrow acceptable window for repotting just as the tree is beginning to wake up in the spring. That’s proven to be the conventional wisdom amongst bonsai practitioners.
Subsequent books mentioned a caveat: that azaleas get repotted in the summer To promote bloom. The books alluded to special care for the summer-repotted trees, but didn’t offer much insight into what that might entail.
Then I learned that it is acceptable also to repot in the fall as a tree is going dormant, but before there is a risk of a hard freeze. I tried it myself and observed that the tree was weaker in spring but stronger by summer, though I’m sure results vary wildly between species and climates.
Lately, I’ve seen more frequent recommendations for summer repots, including for pines and maples. While I suspect that summer repots are not wise in a particularly hot and dry climate, are there advantages in certain climates? With certain species? With certain stages of development? Would someone with more experience please weigh in?