By
Norman Winter California
is home to two of the most beautiful trees in the world, the
redwood and the giant sequoia. If you have ever seen them,
you were probably like me and just stood there in
awe. More
than likely you returned to Mississippi wishing you could
grow such spectacular trees. You can. Both the redwood and
sequoia are in the redwood family. The bald
cypress, one of our most beautiful native trees of the South
is in the same family. Don't think of it as a swampy trash
tree because it isn't. It is a superior landscape tree that
will grow on almost any soil. It commonly reaches 50 to 70
feet high and 20 to 30 feet wide. The bald cypress is this
year's Louisiana Select plant of the year. It can
grow beautifully from our Gulf Coast to Syracuse, New York.
The foliage is gorgeous, turning from green to a russet or
orangish-brown in the fall. The bark is an attractive
reddish brown and is especially noteworthy when it reaches a
stage of buttressing. The
cypress knees which people see in the swamps and fear will
develop in the landscape usually only develop in the
presence of water. Dawn
redwood is another tree available at nurseries. It is worth
growing just so you can say its botanical name, Metasequoia
glyptostroboides. This species was thought to be extinct
until it was found in China in the 1940s. If you
are a fan of dinosaur movies, then the dawn redwood is for
you as it is one of the oldest living trees on
Earth. Its
mature size can reach 70 to 100 feet high and 25 feet wide.
It has been known to reach 40 to 50 feet in height after 20
years of good growing conditions. The tree is very pyramidal
in shape. Friends tell me that the dawn redwood is fairly
quick to form a buttress at the bottom of the tree, which is
most attractive in a landscape setting. Container-grown
trees are a good buy right now at almost every nursery or
garden center. While fall and early spring are traditionally
thought of as tree planting times, container-grown stock
allows us to plant around the year. Correct
planting will give your tree or shrub a good start. Dig the
hole no deeper than the height of the root ball. The height
of the root ball is less than the height of the container
because the nursery leaves space at the top of the container
to hold water and fertilizer. Plant
the tree so that the top of the root ball is level with or a
little higher than the ground. Digging the hole too deep may
result in the tree settling too low. The
planting hole should be at least 2 to 3 times wider than the
root ball. Measure the diameter of the root ball and
multiply that number by 2 or 3. The wider the hole the
better. When you
finish planting, use your hands to form a 3-inch-high mound
around the edge of the root ball with the remaining
backfill. The mound will help make sure all the water goes
right into the root ball this summer. Released:
May 29, 1996 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Giant Redwoods
Have Mississippi Cousins
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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