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Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by loveplants2 8 (My Page) on Fri, Aug 26, 11 at 2:42
| Hello tcleigh, I must say that i'm very impressed with all that you have done... BRAVO!!! You did a great job in collecting all of the great ingredients and putting together the screens as well!! How in the world did you get your fiancee to agree to this in the bathroom? LOL You have a gift to be able to do that!!! I dont even think that i would do that in my bathroom...your bathroom looks so beautiful too! : ) I love everything that you have done and i have to say that you went right to town. Pretty work!!! As far as some of your questions about the roots etc. I will let someone else with more experience add to your post and answer those questions!!! I just want to say that you have done a great job!!! I like to use Foliage Pro for fertilizing. You would probably like it as well. Sometimes it is hard too find, but you can alwyas find it on line... Good Luck!!! Laura in VB |
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| Well you are certainly a detail person. I am sure all your details will help anyone contemplating making a mix for the first time. My only suggestion, based on my need to screen a variety of materials, would be to fasten the largest screen size to your frame, (also the strongest)cut out whatever number of smaller size screens needed, to insert on top of the permanent screen as the job requires. Al |
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| wow Id have to bath outside if I did that to our tub. Looks like you did a great job. Leaving that root exposed wont hurt a thing. It will just grow bark like the rest of the trunk. I kind of like the look of trees that have a root like that. Makes it look well anchored down. mike |
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| Great job on the details. A couple of points - I screen outdoors on breezy days and I don't use water - I think it's easier and faster ..... and you don't need to let the soil dry. I also measure the 1:1:1 ratio of ingredients AFTER they're screened. That's just what works for me, but whatever gets the job done & you feel is easiest is what's best. ;-) Initially incorporate gypsum and use Epsom salts regularly in small doses IF you're using a soluble fertilizer (like Peters/MG/others) that DOESN'T contain Ca and Mg. If using Foliage-Pro, skip both Epsom salts and the gypsum - it's in the fertilizer. Pot size is fine, but I'm not sure the timing was the best. I'd repot (it's Taxodium distichum, yes? - bald cypress) it in the spring before serious bud movement. It WILL fill the pot with roots quickly, and that will limit growth, so if you want to max the mass, go with a bigger pot ion the spring & repot yearly. I would remove what was formerly the trunk growing under the adventitious roots that sprouted from the trunk at the next repot. Keeping your root system shallow makes it easier to tend. In the picture of the roots where your hand is showing, I would sever the lower trunk just below where the dark (black?) marks on the trunk end - just below the attachment point of the main grouping of roots. Your figs/succulents/houseplants are going to love it. Once you get the watering down, you'll be on easy street. ;-) Good luck - good job! Al |
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- Posted by imstillatwork 8-9 Oregon Coast / (My Page) on Fri, Aug 26, 11 at 23:15
| Your strange little cypress is.... wait for it... ...a Coastal Redwood... :)
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| Very nice job! Looks like you have a very fine gritty mix. Your plants will enjoy it very much. Good work on making the screens too. They should be veryhandy for screening the ingredients. As Al would say, "strong work". :) Let us know how your redwood tree does in your new mix. Margo |
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| Thanks for all your responses, everyone! I'm very excited about potting more plants in the gritty mix after this hurricane departs. As far as fertilizer goes, I think I'll order some Foliage-Pro so I can get nearly all my nutrient requirements in one place. Al -- that's good advice about screening. Seems like a much less labor-intensive system than my tub method. Regarding the trunk/roots, I had a feeling I didn't take enough off, but I didn't realize I could chop off the old trunk altogether. That will certainly help keep things shallow and easier to maintain in the same pot. imstillatwork -- I have to respectfully disagree with you on that one. Might you be biased based on your location? :) I purchased that little guy from a landscape supplier in GA. He, in turn, had bought all his saplings in FL, where the bald cypress is king. I grant that they look very similar when they're small, but if you compare various pictures, I think you'll realize it's a bald cypress (or maybe the pictures aren't detailed enough). I kind of wish it was a Castal Redwood, though. |
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- Posted by meyermike_1micha 5 (mikerno_1@yahoo.com) on Sun, Aug 28, 11 at 12:25
| Now that the electricity is back on I had to look at this thread. Bravo, BRAVO! Mike |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Sun, Aug 28, 11 at 13:05
| Great job! Looks like Bald Cypress bark to me, too! Josh |
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| One last hint, though it's probably a little late. 1x4 lumber will do the job very well @ half the weight of 2x4s. That will become more relevant when/if you start shaking the sieves to screen out fines. Again - good job on the details - wish you much success. Al |
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| Thank you for your pictorial, it's so helpful. I'm in the camp of confused right now about the gritty mix, but do want to understand it all. I understand the mechanics, just not where to purchase the ingredients. I wish there was a store called "Al's Gritty Mix Market." LOL. So it would be a one stop shop. Thank you for your pictorial, it's so helpful. |
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| Anita, I see that you're in IL. "Oak Hill Gardens" (outside of Chicago) carries the small bark for the gritty mix. After Al recommended it, I got a bag the next time I was in the area. Gail |
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