I didn’t have a very strenuous work day today, so I went to a Level 2-3 flow class. It was rough. I’ve been off my regular practice, going pretty much just to the mid-week restorative classes lately. My forearms and hands are feeling a lot better today, but still I had to spend more time in rest poses than I have in practices past. I have a pretty intense week ahead packed full of hand-in-hand coaching sessions, so I conserved some energy for the days ahead. It felt great to stretch, flow and do some strength work as well.

Anyone have tips for muscle and joint fatigue? I’ve been taking hot salt baths, using arnica (internally and gel forms), taking rest days, eating protein, and bananas. Any other ideas? I can’t afford to sustain an injury — my livelihood depends on my body working!

Now…on to one of those rest poses for the rest of the evening!

Logbook Activity

  • Type: Flexibility
  • Date: 03/31/2008
  • Time: 19:00:00

I’ve decided to remove “my other blog” link for this site. It isn’t because I don’t want to share these articles. It’s because I’m inviting some others to guest blog at gardenhelp. I have a few professionals on board who are interested in sharing their knowledge with the gardening community. Since I have no way (right now) to break out their posts from mine, I don’t feel comfortable having this site slurp everything over.

Now, if I hear from a lot of you that you follow these gardening posts regularly here, I’ll work (harder) on finding a way to make it work. But given it’s spring, I can barely get to a yoga class for being exhausted from gardening with clients all day long, it may be a while before this can happen.

I’ll add gardenhelp.org back to my regular sidebar blogroll on this site. Please feel free to drop by anytime to read and to ask questions. Forthcoming posts in the next few weeks will cover topics like:
“Why the peach tree had to go”
“Nori the Moss Lady — why & when Moss makes sense as a lawn”
“Shotweed — a cool season annual to remove now!”
“Installing a concrete paver patio — one client’s journey”
“Finishing a boulder seating wall and flagstone patio”
“What’s in the vegie garden this year?”
“One potato; New Potato”
“Front Garden planting plan”
“May Flowers”

…the order, the topics and the frequency may be different, but there’s your teaser.

Oh, and yes, I haven’t been to yoga since the Wednesday restorative. I had hoped to go this morning, but my hands are tired and I have several hands-on sessions next week, so they’re getting a break. I may do a hands-free practice on my own later today. I figure carrying heavy pots, moving trees, and moving boulders yesterday counts for some kind of exercise…right?!

Yesterday I spent most of the morning running to wholesale nurseries for clients. Yes, I hold a retail plant license. Many of my clients have limited time. Some are working moms. Others are world-travelling executives. Some just don’t drive. You get the picture. They might love trips to the retail nursery, but sometimes it just makes sense for them to have me deliver plants to their door.

azara_microphylla_haglund_1.jpgTomorrow I’m coaching a client on putting new plants into her garden. Rather than spend hours and hours shopping with me, she decided to have me buy the plants for her and bring them to our session. This is a great service for her, and its loads of fun for me. As a plant geek, I adore a chance to visit the nurseries and hand-select the best plant options to fit each clients needs — from budget to privacy to anything else.

 After I was finished with my client shopping, I took a few minutes to walk thru the nursery to see what fabulous new plants were in stock. And, I was thrilled to find two trees that I’ve been wanting.

azara_microphylla_haglund_2.jpgOne is an Azara microphylla, which is a broadleaf evergreen with tiny, shiny dark green leaves. It grows fairly vertically, becoming wider with age. In the spring it has tiny yellow flower that are very fragrant, especially on warmer days. In the past I just haven’t found ones large enough for my needs. They aren’t super fast grower, so usually my suppliers only have them at about 2-3′ tall, max. My score was a 7′ tall one with beautiful tree-like form. It was a bit beyond the budget of zero I’d planned to spend, but I knew the opportunity to find a nice one at this size wouldn’t be around for long, so I grabbed it up. (See, if you send me to shop for you, you’ll have the benefit of someone who knows a “must-have” buy!)

The second score is a Clerodendrum trichotomum or Harlequin Glorybower. This sweet little tree/large shrub offers beautiful pinkish white flowers with abundant jasmine-esque fragrance in late summer, followed/overlapped by shiny metalic pink and purple fruit. It is a charming tree when doing its thing, but it is fairly ugly when dormant. It will go in a blended border to help hide its uglier side. I’ll share a photo of this beauty later.

It’s almost 5pm. Yoga starts at 5:45pm. I’d love to go, but I know my body has had enough for today. Typing even feels a little much on my tired hands.

Shiloh and I had a great time driving to Woodinville and Kirkland today to pick up plants. The first stop had pulled our order, so it was a quick load up, pay and away. The second stop required we walk around to shop and pull our own plants. Fortunately, this nursery is super dog-friendly, so Shiloh got to cruise the nursery with me, off-leash no less. This was her first time shopping at the nursery, and I was thrilled with how well-behaved she was. She hung out very close to me and came to my side everytime I called her. She knew she was getting a special treat today. I just wish she hand an opposable thumb and could carry some plants for me.

Anyway, we shopped for a few hours, loaded up and rushed home. I wolfed down some lunch, jumped in the other car and raced to a pruning and transplanting appointment. For the next couple of hours, I instructed, dug, lifted, pruned, and so forth with my client. We had a great time, but my arms, shoulders and hands are really tired. My left forearm is even twitching, so as much as I would love to hit yoga, I think a salt bath is really what I need. Fortunately, Shiloh got plenty of walking time with me at the nursery, so she’s content. And, I don’t even need to cook dinner. We’re visiting a favorite restaurant on the 30/30 list.

So no yoga, but got loads of exercise and fresh air today!

jd_320_240_2.jpgI know it’s taken me a lot of words in part I of this piece on moving trees to get to actually sharing a tree moving experience, but I do think it’s important to discuss why we might move a tree and the variety of caveots associated with tree placement and relocation. Sure, every situation will have a different set of rules applied to it, and I freely admit that I haven’t, and couldn’t possibly, address every tree and every scenario. However, here’s the steps a client and I took in late winter to move a small Stewartia that had been planted in the “wrong” location.

The Stewartia in question had actually been located into a garden bed, away from the house. In many scenarios, it was actually just fine where it was. However, my client needed (wanted) to put in a patio to make their garden more usable. And, the Stewartia was sited in the middle of the best spot for this patio. So, together, we decided to move it this winter before it leafed out but after the chance of a big freeze would limit its ability to root rapidly into its new location. (As I write this, I laugh, thinking of the freezing rain we had last night. Just enough frozen stuff to make me a little bit nervous.) My client had decided it was worth trying to save the tree rather than just cut it down and dispose of it.

To get ready for the job, we evaluated the tree, deciding which side would be the new “front” as it was going from a circular bed to a bed that would give a focal, “front” view to the tree. Then, we dug the new hole for the tree. We wanted the new location ready for the tree as soon as we got it out of the ground. We estimating how much rootball would come with the tree, based on how much rooting area we thought we could handle, and dug the new hole accordingly. To help ensure the heavy new tree wouldn’t sink when planted, we lightly tamped down the base of the new hole and made it quite wide. Then we went back to the tree to begin the process of moving it.

First, we made sure we had the right tools. These included several sharp shovels, several hori-hori knives, a large tarp, several ground shears and a ground saw. The hori-hori knives were to allow us hand digging; you could use your favorite hand tool/trowel if you prefer. The ground shears and saw are tools that I specifically only use underground. Once tools come in contact with soil, they tend to dull up pretty fast. I tend to use my older tools for these tasks, but I keep them sharp! Before we began digging, we cleaned and sterilized all the tools. We used a flame torch on some of the shovels and liquid lysol on all of the hand tools.

Then we began our work. We had a team of four. Three of us did most of the digging. The fourth came in to help with the final part of moving.

Two of the team used sharp shovels to begin digging a perimeter around the base of the tree. My rule of thumb on moving a tree is to “dig as big a root ball as you think you’ll be able to move”. Yes, that’s vague. If you’ve never moved a tree before, you might want to do it with a professional the first time! Once the main perimeter cuts were made with the shovels, we got in with hand tools and began a merry-go-round working our way around the perimeter. As one person dug, another would follow with sharp shears and saws to clean cut any large roots. Remember: the small “hairy roots” in the first 18″ of the soil are the feeder roots. You want a lot of these. The bigger roots are mostly scaffolding roots, which hold up the tree and give it stability and nutrient storage. Clean cuts on these are very important.

As we worked our way around and around the tree, it became apparent that the tree hadn’t been planted well in the first place. I wasn’t surprised. Based on the age of the tree, it should have been much larger than it was. When we found the original wire tree basket still attached to the tree roots, which had kinked around the metal, I knew this was part of the reason the tree’s growth was stunted. As well, nearly all of the scaffolding roots were growing on one side (the north side) the tree. So, we did what we could to remove the dangerous metal pieces as we dug.

Eventually, we had a good depth around the perimeter of the tree. Now, we had to cut it from the bottom. I knew we wouldn’t have much to deal with in scaffolding roots since they seemed to run more laterally than downward in this tree’s case. Gently, one of our team tipped the tree sideways as another cut the bottom of the tree.

jd_240_320_1.jpgOnce the tree was seperated from the ground, we gently tipped the tree to one side and slipped a large tarp under it. We tipped the tree the opposite way and pulled the tarp through. Yes, easier said than done, but it is do-able with patience.

Then, with four people working on the tree, we pulled, tugged and pushed to get the tree on the tarp out of the hole. Again, easier said than done, but it is doable. And, again, don’t tug by the trunk or limbs of the tree.

With the tree out of the hole, we could now see the root ball in its entirety. One team member returned to the new location hole and dug some more to accomodate our large rootball. As he did this, I evaluated all the roots and corrected any torn ones by cutting them cleanly.

Then, we worked together to spin the tree, on the tarp, so we could drag it to the new hole and easily drop it into place. Yes, you’re right, “easier said than done”. But we did it. We took care not to smack each other with limbs. We laughed. One of us gave the “1-2-3-heave!” count, and away we went. Soon we had the tree in its new home.

We planted the tree in, taking care to bury it only as deep as it was planted originally. And, we put a hose on the new planting on a slow drip to water it in. (My client continued to do this for a few days to help supplement the light rains and give the tree a chance to root in well.) As the water ran, I trimmed out broken branches only. We’ll let the tree decide which limbs it wants to release this spring. There’s no need to try to trim it to match the top to the trimmed roots on the bottom. Also, we trimmed branches off a large tree beside this tree’s location. Eventually this larger tree will be removed as it is in the wrong place, but for now it is staying as we watch and see how the Stewartia takes root.

When we moved the Stewartia, its buds were beginning to swell, but they hadn’t opened. Much of the energy a deciduous tree uses to open spring buds is stored in the stem near the bud. So, the root system doesn’t get tapped much for this process. This is why sometimes a plant will bud out in spring only to die right after. Its stems had energy, but its roots did not in this case. (Again, I’m generalizing here.) Once the bud opens, the leaf begins photosynthesizing, feeding the plant. So far, several weeks later, the buds have opened and the tree seems to be doing well. My client and I look forward to seeing how the tree progresses into the spring. When the ground gets warmer, I’ll probably recommend a mycorhizzae application. For now, I just hope the ground doesn’t freeze!

Oh, and the patio space is filling in nicely. It has been excavated, and the crushed base material will be laid in this weekend.

Any questions?!

I had a busy work day yesterday and was looking forward to yoga then a walk with Shiloh with Bob in the evening. Well, things sorta worked out that way. Tuesday I missed yoga ’cause I got a frantic call from a friend needing a ride to the hospital. Don’t ask. He’s fine, but the evening was shot. So, anyway, I was really looking forward to Weds night with “the family”.

 I did make it to yoga, which I desperately needed. My hands and arms were in good shape, but they’re definitely still affected by days of using my hand saw and shears. Yes, yesterday was one of those days. But, my hamstrings, upperback, IT-bands, and really the rest of my body (and mind) were much better for yoga class. Tonight I hope/plan to hit a flow class and try to get that back into my routine. It may depend on how strenuous today is — I’m doing big plant buys and have a client session on pruning, weeding and perennial divisions, so we’ll see…

And, the walk…well, when I went into yoga at 5pm the sky was grey but calm and dry. When I walked out at 6pm, it was raining. By the time I made it home and started dinner, it was spitting snowing raining. Then it was dumping hail. Then it was dumping snowing rain. Shiloh begged to go out in the hail. She ran to the bottom of the steps as I laughed, knowing she would immediately turn around to run back in when her tiny dog brain registered that she was being pelted with painful, frozen rain. Sure enough, she did what I predicted. And, poor girl, she didn’t get a walk on Weds. Today, though, she gets to ride with me in the truck all day on plant pick ups — a real treat for both of us. Who doesn’t dream of taking their dog to work?!

Logbook Activity

  • Type: Flexibility
  • Date: 03/26/2008
  • Time: 17:00:00
  • Total Time: 1:00:00.00

Quite often my clients struggle with inherited gardens that include desirable plants that are just in the wrong location. What was once a small shrub near a foundation may have grown into a small tree that now encroaches on windows and building sidings becoming access paths for rats to rooftops. A random tree may be growing in the middle a lawn where its bark is suceptible to the wrath of the lawnmower. Really the list goes on. So the question becomes what to do about these issues?

In some cases inappropriate pruning has been the solution. More than once I’ve 2008_03_tree_transplant_1.jpgvisited a new client with overgrown trees near foundations. Rather than know they have the power to move the tree to a new location, the client (or the client’s mow-blow-go gardener) whacks away at the tree trying to “make it smaller”. This, as any of my clients who have taken pruning lessons knows, results in more problems than solutions. Random whacking removes one limb, replacing it with countless others that are weaker than the original. It doesn’t solve the problem. The rats can still use the ladder. The roots of the tree can continue to hump against the foundation. Surrounding walkways continue to heave. Siding continues to be compromised. Again, what should be done?

Ideally, in the first place, the garden designer should have selected an appropriate plant for an appropriate place. Too often longterm plant growth (along with exposure requirements and more) are ignored by designers (or installers). Since we’re looking at situations where the problem is already in place, the ideal solution is to move the wrong plant to the right place.

Moving a tree can be a daunting task. They’re heavy. They’re alive. They’re fragile. Still, they’re movable. In some cases moving a tree means removing it altogether. If it’s been damaged significantly it may require more renovation work than you’re likely to perform. As well, it may never recover from past damage. If it is in a location where hardscape makes it impossible to remove the rootball, then realistically it won’t survive transplanting. However, if the tree is in decent shape and you have the right tools for the job, moving it to a new location is possible. Don’t have a new location for it yourself? Consider donating it on craigslist or to a local park instead. Remember, this is a living being that contributes to the overall well-being of the planet!

In some cases a tree is just too big to move by hand. But, if access is available, there are tree services that can safely and effectively move your tree for you. Companies like Washington-state-based Big Tree Supply specialize in supplying and moving big trees.

In other cases trees can be moved by hand using the right tools, enough people and doing it at the right time of year. In most cases the right time of year means moving a tree in winter, but late enough in the winter that the ground isn’t frozen. Deciduous trees are dormant this time of year. Evergreens are photosynthesizing, but their growth is significantly curtailed in winter. Yes, finding the balance between moving a plant while it is dormant but while the ground is not frozen can be tenuous. But it is possible. Too, it is possible to move trees after they break bud in spring, but it is harder on the plant.

If a tree is a late winter/early spring bloomer, finding the right time to transplant has another obstacle to overcome — flower buds. Flowering takes an enormous amount of energy from a plant. Too, it uses many of the same nutrients that the plant uses to maintain overall health and to establish new root growth. So, it may behoove you to move a late winter blooming tree, like a star magnolia, right after flowering but before the spring growth surge begins. If the tree is forming fruit, consider knocking them off to encourage the plant to focus its growth underground.

Now that you’ve read a variety of caveots around transplanting your tree, you must be anxious to actually find out how to make the move. Well, tune in soon for part two: Garden Coach on Moving a Dormant Stewartia Tree. I promise, it’s coming soon!

Took a mid-day walk with Shiloh on Monday in the sunshine. I took several days off from yoga to let my body recover. Got a massage, acupuncture and went to a spa over the weekend to add to the relaxation. I think things are back on track. Have several pruning clients this week, but I think I’m ready to get back to that as well as back to yoga this week. I’m going from relaxed to antsy, so its definitely time.

Oh, and we got about 4 tons of crushed rock delivered, so laying in the front patio is coming soon! I can’t wait for it to be done!

Logbook Activity

  • Type: Walk
  • Date: 03/24/2008
  • Time: 12:00:00
  • Total Time: 00:15:00.00
  • Distance: 1 miles
  • Average Pace: 15:00/mile

Today is the first day in many that I haven’t had hands-on training appointments with at least one client. After a hot, salt bath, I crashed early and hard last night, sleeping almost 11 hours. And, I needed it! Today my hands and arms aren’t feeling completely worn out & I’m much more alert. Today, I’m taking it easy, doing office work instead of gardening work. In some areas I’m even getting caught up!

When the sun broke out a little while ago, Shiloh and I went for a quick walk around the neighborhood. It looks like storm clouds are making their way back in, so I’m glad we got out when we did!

Logbook Activity

  • Type: Walk
  • Date: 03/21/2008
  • Time: 13:38:50
  • Total Time: 00:15:00.00
  • Distance: 1 miles
  • Average Pace: 15:00/mile

Went to restorative yoga, which is a beginner/restorative combo class. Lots of students who are progressing beginners were there, so the teacher worked on more difficult poses. Usually this is fine, but today I was hoping for something VERY restorative. My hands and shoulders are still tired. Anyway, class was good. We did a lot of shoulder openers, and I did a lot of adjustments to give my arms and hands a break. Glad I went. Am going to take Thursday off from flow class an will return on Sunday. My body needs a rest.

Logbook Activity

  • Type: Flexibility
  • Date: 03/19/2008
  • Total Time: 1:00:00.00

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