500 likes | 628 Views
Lyn Ellis and Murray McCracken at Currajuggle Creek Nursery. 2014 Champions of the Catchment Place Story. You’ve planted our trees. Here’s how we make them. Potting mix made from sand, pine bark and bush soil, providing mycorrhizal bacteria and other inputs that help the seedlings grow.
E N D
Lyn Ellis and Murray McCracken atCurrajuggle Creek Nursery 2014 Champions of the Catchment Place Story
Potting mix made from sand, pine bark and bush soil, providing mycorrhizal bacteria and other inputs that help the seedlings grow.
Making a dip in the potting mix with the back of a screwdriver.
Hand watering minimizes waste and lets us inspect each plant every day.
Greenhouses help keep out pests, and provide a stable growing environment.
Murray made the high benches. These avoid bending and prevent slug and snail attack.
Did you know that we still have some stock available from last season?
See the space under the pots? This is the key to air-pruning of the roots.
The pots have vertical ridges. This makes the roots grow straight down, and not coil around.
The air-pruned roots have nubs ready to shoot straight down into the soil when planted.
Even the advanced “long stems” have vertical roots and healthy root nubs.
Long stems can be planted deeply into the soil, and will sprout roots from the trunk.
Protecting a MongaWaratah from birds, so the seeds can be harvested.
Place story by Su Wild-River, Upper ShoalhavenLandcare Council and Matilda O’Brien, Braidwood Central School Spoken by Lyn Ellis and Murray McCracken With grateful thanks and congratulations from all of us who plant your trees and shrubs, and watch them growing strong and tall.