BoomShakalaka
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I am thinking contained,, because if I could let solo's legs walk a bit,, man,, there would be no limit
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I am thinking contained,, because if I could let solo's legs walk a bit,, man,, there would be no limit
That's kind of what I was thinking.. maybe a thin out for half of them, then if they don't want to grow back quickly you still have some other main roots doing the job while those ones repair themselves. Losing half of ALL the roots to a plant is quite the shock, happened to me transplanting one time lol
But, I have heard of a technique call root scoring when transplanting. Helps the roots start to grow more vigorously once repaired if they were root bound, they start branching off like the plant would if it was topped. Haven't tested this myself, would have to try it in a clear green cup or something.
When i transplant, even if they arent root bound, i always tear the roots a bit and open them up. so that original root ball doesnt stay so bunched up and spreads out evenly throughout the pot.
yup, done that before, accidentally rip off the bottom half while transplanting,,, I've killed my share of plants before, thats for sure.
when I was a teen working in landscaping, that is what we used to do. Most of the nursery stock was severly root bound, so when dropping into the ground, we would score it with a knife, vertical lines, about 5 or 6 evenly spaced, used to cut in about the thickness of the blade, then kinda flared the bottom out as we dropped into the ground. that was my first experience with planting, growing, etc, lots of new construction landscaping, and then maintenance, just being told what to do..lol
Are we allowed to let the roots grow outside the cup or does everything have to be contained inside the cup?