transplanting palms

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miketropic
Seedling
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Oct 26, 2012 5:14 pm
Location: Kentucky 6B

transplanting palms

Post by miketropic »

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.


lucky1
Arctic Palm Plantation
Posts: 11325
Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 7:31 pm
Location: Vernon BC, Zone 5a or 5b (close to 6A!)

Post by lucky1 »

mike
best to leave them potted up till I move
Yeah if you ARE moving next year.

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. :lol: :lol:

Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
KrisK
Seedling
Posts: 187
Joined: Wed Aug 25, 2010 8:18 pm

Post by KrisK »

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.
miketropic
Seedling
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Oct 26, 2012 5:14 pm
Location: Kentucky 6B

Post by miketropic »

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.
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