oscar_e_leon
ArboristSite Lurker
I oversee our Church garden and a few years ago we renovated our gardens, which included a hedge of 55 Little Gem Dwarf Magnolia trees along the front perimeter of our property. Unfortunately, the vast majority of them were planted too deep. We only found this out after the job was done and we had a professional arborist evaluate our site. The root flare was anywhere from 2-6 inches too deep, some as deep as 8 in. I had to excavate the dirt to reveal the root flares around all the trees. Now we have "wells" around most of the trees. I gradually have been removing some of the dirt around each well to try and level out the depth differences in the surrounding soil. I have also had to keep removing debris/mulch from filling back up in the wells so as to keep the root flare exposed.
We've had a couple arborists over the years suggest covering these wells with small river stones to keep debris out, and also to make it look kind of decent. One of our arborist consultants was indifferent to the idea and even leaned against it. We were advised not to fill the wells with mulch as this would keep too much moisture around the root flare and above the root flare, and eventually the mulch would decompose into dirt, and we're back to where we started. We recently decided to give the stones idea a try.
I've already covered about 8 tree wells with these stones ("pond pebbles", to be exact, average 2" in diameter ), with an average coverage diameter of about 1.75 ft (the trees vary in size but average around 8.5 ft tall and 4.5 ft wide).
Does anyone have any thoughts and/or suggestions on this? What alternatives do we have? It's definitely too late to dig up the trees and replant them at proper height. They've been in the ground for about 2.5 years. I've included a couple photos.
We've had a couple arborists over the years suggest covering these wells with small river stones to keep debris out, and also to make it look kind of decent. One of our arborist consultants was indifferent to the idea and even leaned against it. We were advised not to fill the wells with mulch as this would keep too much moisture around the root flare and above the root flare, and eventually the mulch would decompose into dirt, and we're back to where we started. We recently decided to give the stones idea a try.
I've already covered about 8 tree wells with these stones ("pond pebbles", to be exact, average 2" in diameter ), with an average coverage diameter of about 1.75 ft (the trees vary in size but average around 8.5 ft tall and 4.5 ft wide).
Does anyone have any thoughts and/or suggestions on this? What alternatives do we have? It's definitely too late to dig up the trees and replant them at proper height. They've been in the ground for about 2.5 years. I've included a couple photos.