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Salix Flamingo Willow
in Plants
I have had my plant in the garden for 3 years, can I move it to another part of the garden or can I put it in a large pot. When can I move it?
Ideas please
Ideas please
0
Posts
My guess for when to move it, if you are going to move it, would be when it is dormant during the winter/early spring months, as this seems to be the advice for most other deciduous trees/shrubs. I bought one in the middle of December; it was delivered the other week as a bareroot plant, so was clearly moved in its dormant state. Given this, my best guess as a newbie gardener would be that this period (winter/early spring) is the best time to move it, although you may have to wait for a day when the ground isn't frozen. However, I don't know much about different types of trees or how their respective root systems grow, so I don't know whether or not this would be wise for a more well established tree that is the age you say yours is; mine is only young so didn't have a particularly extensive root system, so could probably deal with the move better than an older plant where the roots are more plentiful and therefore more likely to get damaged. Hopefully one of the more experienced gardeners on this forum can offer you a more concrete answer!
The site I bought mine from says that they can be grown in tubs or containers, so depending on how big the roots are I guess you might be able to put it in a large pot. Again, hopefully more experienced gardeners will be able to advise you better on this.
I'm really looking forward to seeing how my Salix Flamingo grows - it looks a bit uninspiring at the moment, just a few twiggy little branches with some dead leaves still clinging on, but the pictures I've seen online seem to promise something beautiful!
I just love this Flamingo it is so pretty, but in the wrong place, I think I will pot it when the ground gets a bit warmer, that is if the roots are not too big
If you can't plant in the ground, you'll need a sizeable container, and it will require extra attention because of that.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
My baby flamingo willow has had to go into a big pot out of necessity (small garden, not much room for planting anything in beds), so I am glad to have read their comments - I now know that I will need to get a saucer (a huge one!) to go under my large pot and that I will need to give it extra special care in terms of watering when summer rolls around! Thank you to you, @rosyposymarie, for asking the question and to @Fairygirl and @Obelixx for their answers.
I hope your flamingo willow is very happy in its new spot in the ground and that you get many more years of joy from it.
Treated well they can be pretty and decorative and provide movement when the breeze catches their stems.