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Harrisburg Tree Blog

How To Plant Blueberry Bushes

8/13/2020

 
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If you want to start harvesting fruit, you should learn how to plant blueberry bushes. 

Why? Blueberries will grow and last for over 45 years. Paying close attention to the conditions and location ensures you yield tasty fruit for an exceptionally long time. Blueberries flourish only in soils that satisfy their needs. The soil also must drain well. If water remains in the spot you're planting for more than 48 hours, don't plant any blueberries.

Here are tips for growing blueberry plants:
  • Blueberries develop best in acidic soil with a 5.0 pH 
  • Integrating rich eco-green matter as a top dress or into the soil
  • If planting rows of blueberries, consider hilling the plants. Hilling lifts the blueberries over the natural soil level by
  • Blueberries need the sun

How to Plant Blueberry Bushes: Location and Soil

Once you have chosen your location, make sure that the spot gets the full sun at least part of the day. Blueberries will endure partial shade, particularly late in the day.

Blueberries will flourish at a higher pH. Though, to get the most increased production, you must amend the soil near the plants. Do this task leisurely over time. Don't try and decrease the pH all at the same time.

Reduce your pH by:
  • Use sawdust from any conifer like fir, pine, or spruce. With sawdust, pay attention to the amount of nitrogen. If the leaves are becoming yellow, that signifies a Nitrogen deficiency.
  • Using ammonium sulfate fertilizer
  • Using ground sulfur fertilizer

Planting Blueberry Plants

Plant blueberries at precisely the same depth as grown at the nursery. Burrow the hole more significant than the size of the roots, back-filling with a mineral-rich compost mixture. If compost isn't available, use the best bark mulch you can find, add 10% peat moss. When planted, keep adding fresh compost as a topcoat to enrich your organic matter. Also, get rid of a ¼ of the branches. This work will encourage energetic branching.

In the first year, the plants are establishing themselves. You will not have to prune until the third year, after completing the fruiting phase. Perform pruning correctly when you open up the plant and eliminate the older limbs. 

Since they have shallow-roots, blueberries necessitate more water than other fruit types, so the surface roots don't dry out. Blueberries react best to top-notch deep watering instead of keeping the surface damp. Water will rise to the surface.

Fertilize in the early part of the springtime as leaves are coming out of dormancy. A soil test is best for analyzing your fertilizer. A well-balanced fertilizer is a 10-5-5. After trimming, another fertilizer application will deliver the necessary nutrition required for the new growth to break from the shortened limbs. 

Take pleasure in the beauty and taste of a blueberry plant. This foliage brings food and elegance to your yard. Not to mention, blueberry plants are quite manageable. Winter's vibrant branches, spring flowers, summer fruit, and fall leaves. A blueberry plant is a plant for any season. 

If you need any tips or assistance in planting or maintaining a blueberry plant, call us at Harrisburg Tree Service.

​

How To Grow A Living Fence

7/16/2020

 
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Fences are well-liked in cities and suburbs. They offer distinct boundaries for your landscape, giving you privacy. They could also help keep pets and little ones, help cut down on gusting wind, and provide security. When you think of a fence as a natural design element, a living fence could be a real asset.

A Living Fence Could Be an Excellent Idea

While many property owners decide on new fencing options, plastic, chain-linked, or wooden, a living fence has plenty of potentials. These others don't offer. Using the correct type of hedge plant could offer firewood, food, or medicine. Perhaps they can also be leguminous plants, improving fertility in the neighboring soil and providing mulch substance for gardens. 

Living fences also obstruct wind, helping in halting soil erosion and keeping the soil moist. These fences could last years at a low cost. Moreover, living fences enrich the beauty of your outdoor space.

Simply put, a living fence is an excellent idea. It creates resources: food, mulch, medicine, and much more. 
The smaller number of trees we cut down to make fences, the better for oxygen production and carbon isolation. Maybe it's straightforward to understand, but a fence created instead of a fence that needs creating sounds way more reasonable.

The Basics of Make a Living Fence

Living fences are easy to make, though they do necessitate some patience. It's critical to remember the advantages are plentiful for those willing to wait.

Firstly, you must pick the right plant. Preferably, it's a plant that develops swiftly and grows excellently. The prospects are numerous. Hazel and mulberry work well in much of the nation, and inosculation is possible with pears or apples.

Some fruitful, fertility-building choices include honey locust, Siberian pea shrub, tagasaste, raspberries, blackberries, rugosa, and hawthorn roses. The truth is numerous things will work.

The necessary foundation for a living fence is to put your plants close enough together that they shut up any holes with leaves and branches. For some plants, this will take a couple of years. For others, getting the desired results will be quicker. 

Instead of using slow-forming hedges, consider using nitrogen-fixing, fast-growing legumes to speed up the process by providing a fence and offering natural fertilization. As the desired shape of your living fences takes form, thin out the legumes.

Osage Orange Living Fence

One of the most well-liked plants used for living fences in America is the Osage orange. While the seeds are theoretically edible and loved by squirrels, it's not a plant mostly wanted for its potentials in the kitchen. 

It's very tough, has painful thorns for safety purposes, and works great as a windbreak. Osage oranges, also called horse apples, are simple to grow from cuttings, seeds, or sprouts. Using this plant was common in many sections of the U.S. before creating barbed wire due to its reputation of being tight and durable. Within 12 years, the trees develop long-lasting, resilient wood that oddly makes for excellent fence posts.

Reach out to us at Harrisburg Tree Service for more information on living fences. Call and explore your options with our tree care experts. 

​

How Important Is It To Keep Up With Pruning My Rose Bushes?

6/6/2019

 
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The reason to keep up with pruning rose bushes is to increase the health of the plant and regulate its shape. Learn proper technique and tips below.

The prime time to prune roses is in the early spring. Pruning has two main advantages: it maintains strong plants and enhances their visual appeal.

​While trimming can be a complicated job, keep in mind that it’s difficult to kill a rose bush with lousy technique and lots of mistakes will at some point grow back. Furthermore, most
arborists agree that a good try at pruning is better than not trying at all.


How to Prune

Begin by getting rid of any diseased, damaged, or dead wood, trimming it back to where it’s in good condition. It can be hard to determine if a stem is dead or not because its coloration can be the same. A way to realize for sure is to snip off a small piece from the tip of a stem. If it’s green inside, it’s alive. If it’s dark brown, it’s dead.

Maintaining a Healthy Rose Bush

To stay healthy, roses require lots of air circulation. Eliminate any big limbs that run through the middle of the bush. These will diminish the airflow when the leaves develop. Besides, take off the shoots that are growing over other plant parts and any little stems.

Make these cuts as near to the plant as you can. If a little stub remains, new growth will occur. After cuts are made, close them with a paste to stop disease and cane borer issues.

Once you have opened up the middle of the plant, prune for appearance and shape. How you trim will depend on the sort of rose plant you have. Different types necessitate different approaches. For instance, you want to prune old garden roses stem by stem cautiously. For miniature roses, a buzz cut will do. Shrub roses have to be trimmed back and don’t require heavy trim work.

Once you’re done, you want to clean up. Rake any debris or leaves from under the plant, so you don’t have a home for invasive pests.

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Harrisburg Tree Service
3915 Union Deposit Rd #506
Harrisburg PA 17109
717-798-9839
  • Home
  • Tree Services
    • Emergency Tree Service
    • Tree Cutting
    • Tree Removal
    • Tree Trimming
    • Stump Grinding
    • Stump Removal
    • Tree Cabling and Bracing
    • Tree Crown Reduction
    • Tree Crowning
    • Land and Brush Clearing
    • Tree Planting
    • Tree Pruning
    • Wood Chipping
  • About
    • Why Us
    • Service Areas >
      • Progress, PA Tree Care Service
      • Colonial Park, PA Tree Care Service
      • Hershey, PA Tree Care Service
      • Carlisle, PA Care Service
      • Elizabethtown, PA Care Service
      • York, PA Care Service
      • Lebanon, PA Care Service
      • Columbia, PA Care Service
      • Hanover, PA Care Service
      • Lancaster, PA Care Service
      • Ephrata, PA Care Service
      • Sunbury, PA Care Service
      • Pottsville, PA Care Service
      • Chambersburg, PA Care Service
      • Westminster Care Service
  • Contact
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