treeman wrote:baldtwitlion wrote:So should we water every day or not
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A good question which deserves to be answered.
The shortest possible way answer is...
Most trees..... yes, this time of year. (call every day ''5'' and twice per day ''6'' ''4'' every second day, ''3'' every third day etc)
Small tree in a big pot - less water - 3-4
newly repotted tree - less water -2 -3
large tree in a small pot - more water - 5 -6
tree which is way over due for repot and in decline - 4 - 5
most deciduous - 5
some water lovers eg quince 5 - 6
small trees shohin or mame - 5 or 6
Pines in general 5 or less
Junipers - 5 - or less
trees which are not perfectly healthy but not too bad 4 - 5
trees which are obviously sick due to leaf or root loss/rot etc. no water until top couple of cm are dry. could be 1 could be 4? should be attended to asap.
trees which have been accidentally over fertilized - 6 -two days in a row then 3 or 4 for a while.
trees which are in a very coarse mix - 5 -6
trees which are in a very fine mix - 4 -5
Very rarely you might have to water some trees 3 or 4 or 5 times per day (40 degrees with 10% humidity)
That should give you
some idea?
Re pines and I'm loathed to post much but in Treemans defense I'm within his parameters. An example of kill a pine with too much watering I can give an example here.
Tree MUGO ..10 year nursery pot 8"..
Cleaned up 2 years ago(dead needles,branch's and all the stuff you do.
Water all the time as the crust dries and nothing happens for a year..no candles..zip.
Re pot into a 300x250X100 pot..do all the stuff and water the thing like it's a drought...Nothing happens.
Bite the bullet a rip it out of the big pot.
Go extreme and do a root prune, strip out needles and a bit of styling.
Get way layed with other things and it dries out on the bench.
Come back to a loss I'm thinking and pot it into a round 125x20mm inward lipped pot.
Raise root ball above lip and mound up soil.
Add a bit of moss to cover nabari and fertilize and water.
Moss looks bright and greeny and wait.
Back buds form in a month.
Candles on 25 tips.
All trimmed out and continual back budding still on the move.
Now I was killing the 'pine' with water.
The neglect of letting it dry out to the stage of the needles shriveling up and falling off, keeping moist/watering on the bench saved my Mugo.
(2 days actually as I was called into work for an overnight job)
A lesson was learned without research but with gathering a few tidd bits from here along the way.
"Water kills Pines and that's a fact"
Will post a pic soon..pretty sure I have a post about my Mugo's somewhere about.
Steve.