transplanting palms
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- Seedling
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Fri Oct 26, 2012 5:14 pm
- Location: Kentucky 6B
transplanting palms
Just as I was ready to find a permanent home for some of my palms I got over the winter the wife is talking about wanting to move next spring. I am fine with this but this next move better be a 10+year house. anyways since I think I will be moving next year sometime I don't want to kill off anything that has put on good growth by digging it up and transplanting it next year but at the same I don't want to waste a summer pot growing and restrict what it could do. I have 2 sabals ( cap hat. and bham ) and a few fortuni I was going to ground plant. best to leave them potted up till I move or try a transplant? I have heard sabals do horrible with transplants but trechys do alright. Anyone with any experience in this please chime in.
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
- Posts: 11325
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 7:31 pm
- Location: Vernon BC, Zone 5a or 5b (close to 6A!)
mike
Sabals and transplants? I've got young Sabals in pots for 4 years that aren't growing more than 1 leaf a year.
So...the risk isn't big.
It's either transplant shock this year or next year.
Sabals grow slow as slugs even in good conditions.
Re the "10+ year house", I'd get it in writing.
Barb
Yeah if you ARE moving next year.best to leave them potted up till I move
Sabals and transplants? I've got young Sabals in pots for 4 years that aren't growing more than 1 leaf a year.
So...the risk isn't big.
It's either transplant shock this year or next year.
Sabals grow slow as slugs even in good conditions.
Re the "10+ year house", I'd get it in writing.


Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If its not terrible big, you can dig far out enough to avoid damaging much of the roots. Erik and I dug what I would call a 15 or 20 gallon sabal last year. (Thanks Erik! ) I wouldn't wanna dig much bigger than that by hand. If you damage the roots of a sabal, you will need to remove some leaves. The compromised roots can't keep up with transpiration losses of a full crown. That is why you see the field dug sabal palmettos with sparse crowns, or "hurricane cut". Sabals grow faster when they get larger. They are a subtropical palm, and require the long hot days to make those sugars and grow. You could "pot-plant" them, too - always an option, and one I would consider if I were moving soon.
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- Seedling
- Posts: 328
- Joined: Fri Oct 26, 2012 5:14 pm
- Location: Kentucky 6B
one is a 5 gallon of good size the other a 3 gallon. I think pot planting them might be my best option for now...but if we don't move am I ever gunna be mad. should I put any extra drain holes in the pot when pot planting? anyone tried transplanting any windmills? I have seen them dug and they seem to transplant very easy.