superchief
New Member
Have a mature 25' Japanese maple on a hillside where I must cover most of the downhill roots with 16" of soil as part of a grading plan. I would definitely like to save the tree and do not want to just trust the uphill roots to do it.
In order to allow air and water to get to the existing roots my thought was to cover the entire area with a series of perforated pipes in parallel, then landscape fabric, then washed stone, then landscape fabric, then 4" of soil. The pipes could be open to air at one end.
One issue this does not solve is encouraging new root growth at the higher elevation - I could add root hormone but it seems unlikely to do much if the new soil is a foot higher than the existing roots.
Cost is not a major consideration in saving the tree.
Do you think this will work or do you have a better way to suggest?
In order to allow air and water to get to the existing roots my thought was to cover the entire area with a series of perforated pipes in parallel, then landscape fabric, then washed stone, then landscape fabric, then 4" of soil. The pipes could be open to air at one end.
One issue this does not solve is encouraging new root growth at the higher elevation - I could add root hormone but it seems unlikely to do much if the new soil is a foot higher than the existing roots.
Cost is not a major consideration in saving the tree.
Do you think this will work or do you have a better way to suggest?