For the love of Prunus mume...

Ume layer separated. It had started to yellow quite a bit so I decided it was time to separate. Once separated I realised the yellowing was probably due to the pot being filled with roots and sucking almost all of the moisture out of the soil! I was watering the layer every day, sometimes twice, and the soil was pretty dry when I separated this afternoon.

IMG_2177.jpegIMG_2178.jpegIMG_2179.jpegIMG_2180.jpeg

The mother tree. I’ll be digging it up this coming winter.

IMG_2181.jpegIMG_2182.jpegIMG_2183.jpeg
 
Ume layer separated. It had started to yellow quite a bit so I decided it was time to separate. Once separated I realised the yellowing was probably due to the pot being filled with roots and sucking almost all of the moisture out of the soil! I was watering the layer every day, sometimes twice, and the soil was pretty dry when I separated this afternoon.

View attachment 581212View attachment 581213View attachment 581214View attachment 581215

The mother tree. I’ll be digging it up this coming winter.

View attachment 581216View attachment 581217View attachment 581218
You may need to trim that tree down some, now being seperated from the mother tree do you think you have enough roots to sustain the top.
 
You may need to trim that tree down some, now being seperated from the mother tree do you think you have enough roots to sustain the top.
I already did, it was close to 2m (6’) tall while on the tree! I basically filled a garbage bag with what I lopped off
 
Ume layer separated. It had started to yellow quite a bit so I decided it was time to separate. Once separated I realised the yellowing was probably due to the pot being filled with roots and sucking almost all of the moisture out of the soil! I was watering the layer every day, sometimes twice, and the soil was pretty dry when I separated this afternoon.

View attachment 581212View attachment 581213View attachment 581214View attachment 581215

The mother tree. I’ll be digging it up this coming winter.

View attachment 581216View attachment 581217View attachment 581218
I was reading on evergreengardenworks about how he, despite the common practice of avoiding this, will immediately start fertilizing cuttings (and likely airlayers) even with freshly grown roots. No direct experience here, but it would interesting to see if it helps it recover from yellowing leaves.


I look forward to seeing the mother tree progress
 
I was reading on evergreengardenworks about how he, despite the common practice of avoiding this, will immediately start fertilizing cuttings (and likely airlayers) even with freshly grown roots. No direct experience here, but it would interesting to see if it helps it recover from yellowing leaves.


I look forward to seeing the mother tree progress
I’ll post updates in my dedicated Ume thread when I have anything to share 👍🏻
 
Back
Top Bottom