I've seen healthy 50 foot tall trees on river banks that have had most of the roots exposed. These trees eventually get claimed by the river but I always thought it was amazing how healthy the trees appeared and how many years/decades they could hang on with so much of the dirt washed away.
I believe this is why you do this... Moisture from soil covering the root flare can soften tree bark, allowing pathogens and insects to penetrate the bark and damage your tree. Think of an open wound on a tree just as you would an injury on your skin. The last thing you want is for the wound to become infected
I have a young single trunk crepe myrtle and had grass on top before. I tried to remove the matted grass and root and trying to expose the root, but failed to. The problem is I am not sure if the fine roots are from the tree or the grass, and because it is clay soil I cannot feel the root and I got scared with the tiny roots. I tried to hose it but because it was clay soil nothing loosen up. I dug so much big brick pieces of clay soil that I have to hammer/chop it back to the powder form. What’s the recommendation to handle it? Thank you
I've seen healthy 50 foot tall trees on river banks that have had most of the roots exposed. These trees eventually get claimed by the river but I always thought it was amazing how healthy the trees appeared and how many years/decades they could hang on with so much of the dirt washed away.
I believe this is why you do this...
Moisture from soil covering the root flare can soften tree bark, allowing pathogens and insects to penetrate the bark and damage your tree. Think of an open wound on a tree just as you would an injury on your skin. The last thing you want is for the wound to become infected
Helpful information, thank you !
How do you know when to stop uncovering the tree flare? Is it ok to uncover the roots under the root flare and if so how much?
I have a young single trunk crepe myrtle and had grass on top before. I tried to remove the matted grass and root and trying to expose the root, but failed to. The problem is I am not sure if the fine roots are from the tree or the grass, and because it is clay soil I cannot feel the root and I got scared with the tiny roots. I tried to hose it but because it was clay soil nothing loosen up. I dug so much big brick pieces of clay soil that I have to hammer/chop it back to the powder form.
What’s the recommendation to handle it?
Thank you
*_Right on brother!_*
do i need to expose the flare of crepe myrtle trees?
Thank You
I'm missing the whole "why" part of this.
Here it is: ua-cam.com/video/qQSCBcIal8s/v-deo.html