sixdogs
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2007
- Messages
- 13,786
- Location
- Ohio
- Tractor
- Kubota M7040, Kubota MX5100, Deere 790 TLB, Farmall Super C
Moving these is no big deal so relax. I believe you planted American Arborvitae, also called Northern White Cedar and I am very familiar moving them and have transplated many both with a tree spade and by ripping them out with a backhoe and doing it myself. Give them water for a few years and 100% should live. I have moved 10-15 footers with no problem. Just WATER THEM and broadcast some fertilizer outside the drip line each spring for a few years. Transplant now if you stll can.
Don't do it yourself because of the learning curve although you could. You need a a skid steer with a 30" front spade. Flag or paint spray all the locations in advance as this can go fast. Dig the first hole an dput the dirtball by the last hole. Dig the second tree and plunk the tree in the first hole. Take dirt back and put in that hole the tree came out of. Rinse and repeat. Don't worry if not exactly straight or they sit a few inches high or not, they will live if you water them. We used to live in Maine and I have planted maybe 500 of these. Maybe 1000.
If a guy is humping and has a helper to guide the tree alignment in the spade and do the same with planting, you can probably do all these in an easy 3/4 day or so but that depends on operator experience. You could rent a skid steer that would likely cost $450 for the day plus transportation. It will take a few hours of learning curve and you will be dreadfully slow for the first 25.
When some people dig a tree, they lift the spades slightly and knock the point off the rootball so the tree fits better in the new hole. That takes too much time. A better way is to dig the blank hole deeper and dig the tree out a ittle shallower and it's close enough. The trees will grow straight and depth doesn't matter much in New England damp gravel and frequent rainfall.
You do need to water the first couple years. Read that a few times since your rock and gravel soil dries out FAST and cedars like damp. Figure it out and broadcat fertilizer as mention but ask about that later. Search how to water trees under my older threads but it's easy. There is an older thread--i think-on moving 12 ft cedars with a backhoe. Don't even think about it since it takes forever.
Drip irrigation is easy but you could also use some 5 gallon buckets witha 3/16" hole drilled in the bottom. Fill the bucket and every drop goes to work. Get a couple 55 gallon barrels, plumb a hose connection at the bottom and lift in bucket loader to water. A better way is a couple hundred feet of Sam's Club hose with quick connectors on them and knock yourself out. We have evolved to this method unless the trees are really out of the way. Start now picking up 5 gallon blacktop buckets from other people's trash.
Putting the trees 8" off the line is a sure way to cause a scuffle so you get some blame and your neighbor is partially a tad in the clear. You could also leave the trees and they could be trimmed and do well but moving is the best idea. I have cut cedars in half and they recover just fine.
By the way, a tight cedar hedge is 4 ft on center, no more and no less. Great time to adjust spacing. Maybe 3' to 4' off the line is a great idea but that's up to you.
EDIT--You know, you could also just plant another row of trees and cut the first ones down in a year or so. Maybe prune while the others grow. Cedars grow really fast and it just takes a few years for six ft. You can buy 3 ft tall plants from a nursery for a couple dollars each and plant those. We start them in pots for the first year and transplant in August. 100% survival rate that way.
Don't do it yourself because of the learning curve although you could. You need a a skid steer with a 30" front spade. Flag or paint spray all the locations in advance as this can go fast. Dig the first hole an dput the dirtball by the last hole. Dig the second tree and plunk the tree in the first hole. Take dirt back and put in that hole the tree came out of. Rinse and repeat. Don't worry if not exactly straight or they sit a few inches high or not, they will live if you water them. We used to live in Maine and I have planted maybe 500 of these. Maybe 1000.
If a guy is humping and has a helper to guide the tree alignment in the spade and do the same with planting, you can probably do all these in an easy 3/4 day or so but that depends on operator experience. You could rent a skid steer that would likely cost $450 for the day plus transportation. It will take a few hours of learning curve and you will be dreadfully slow for the first 25.
When some people dig a tree, they lift the spades slightly and knock the point off the rootball so the tree fits better in the new hole. That takes too much time. A better way is to dig the blank hole deeper and dig the tree out a ittle shallower and it's close enough. The trees will grow straight and depth doesn't matter much in New England damp gravel and frequent rainfall.
You do need to water the first couple years. Read that a few times since your rock and gravel soil dries out FAST and cedars like damp. Figure it out and broadcat fertilizer as mention but ask about that later. Search how to water trees under my older threads but it's easy. There is an older thread--i think-on moving 12 ft cedars with a backhoe. Don't even think about it since it takes forever.
Drip irrigation is easy but you could also use some 5 gallon buckets witha 3/16" hole drilled in the bottom. Fill the bucket and every drop goes to work. Get a couple 55 gallon barrels, plumb a hose connection at the bottom and lift in bucket loader to water. A better way is a couple hundred feet of Sam's Club hose with quick connectors on them and knock yourself out. We have evolved to this method unless the trees are really out of the way. Start now picking up 5 gallon blacktop buckets from other people's trash.
Putting the trees 8" off the line is a sure way to cause a scuffle so you get some blame and your neighbor is partially a tad in the clear. You could also leave the trees and they could be trimmed and do well but moving is the best idea. I have cut cedars in half and they recover just fine.
By the way, a tight cedar hedge is 4 ft on center, no more and no less. Great time to adjust spacing. Maybe 3' to 4' off the line is a great idea but that's up to you.
EDIT--You know, you could also just plant another row of trees and cut the first ones down in a year or so. Maybe prune while the others grow. Cedars grow really fast and it just takes a few years for six ft. You can buy 3 ft tall plants from a nursery for a couple dollars each and plant those. We start them in pots for the first year and transplant in August. 100% survival rate that way.
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