It's a lot less digging. If I hit a large rock, I can guide the root around it. I've planted tree peonies, apples, and hazelnuts this way.
Nothing that I've planted that way has seemed to die of it, yet. (Plants that died mostly did so because a deer ate the whole plant. A tree peonies developed some fungal disease.) But I feel a little guilty when I do this.
Wishing you all a safe Thanksgiving,
Ginda Fisher
eastern MA, zone 6
> On Nov 23, 2020, at 7:32 AM, Elizabeth Hilborn <ehilborn@mebtel.net> wrote:
>
> I echo Lee's advice. I never amend holes now, I plant in soil as it lays and top dress.
>
> My first experience growing fruit trees I amended all (very big) holes. They lasted about 12 years, got quite large, but when they started dying, a post mortem revealed roots did not penetrate beyond the original hole diameter.
>
> On 11/23/2020 6:13 AM, Lee Reich wrote:
>> And any material that dramatically changes the soil porosity creates a "pot in the ground" effect wherein roots stay inn the amended soil
>
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