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Home > Archive > UK gardening > June 2006 > moving rosemary
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| Gardening_Convert 2006-06-29, 9:26 am |
| Hi we have quite a few rosemary shrubs and the wife tried to move one
recently and it just died.
So I tried to move another to fill the gap and it too looks to be dying
, even though I enriched the earth with a bit of multipurpose compost
and also watered it well.
Do the just not like being moved or is this just the wrong time of year
to be doing it ?
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| On 29/6/06 11:02, in article
1151575358.600603.167950@i40g2000cwc.googlegroups.com, "Gardening_Convert"
<colin.day@btinternet.com> wrote:
> Hi we have quite a few rosemary shrubs and the wife tried to move one
> recently and it just died.
>
> So I tried to move another to fill the gap and it too looks to be dying
> , even though I enriched the earth with a bit of multipurpose compost
> and also watered it well.
>
> Do the just not like being moved or is this just the wrong time of year
> to be doing it ?
>
Most things are best moved when they're dormant and Rosemary is not just
now! The other thing is that they, like many other herbs, don't like
over-rich soil or a lot of water. I'm afraid it looks as if they were
battling with conditions that were just too stressful for them.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(email address on website)
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| Gardening_Convert 2006-06-29, 9:26 am |
|
Sacha wrote:
> On 29/6/06 11:02, in article
> 1151575358.600603.167950@i40g2000cwc.googlegroups.com, "Gardening_Convert"
> <colin.day@btinternet.com> wrote:
>
> Most things are best moved when they're dormant and Rosemary is not just
> now! The other thing is that they, like many other herbs, don't like
> over-rich soil or a lot of water. I'm afraid it looks as if they were
> battling with conditions that were just too stressful for them.
> --
> Sacha
> www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
> South Devon
> (email address on website)
chalk another one off to experience 
It'll give me something else to grow for next year 
Is now a good time to be taking cuttings from my other Rosemaries and
if so what's the best method to do this ?
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| On 29/6/06 14:27, in article
1151587631.076451.55580@x69g2000cwx.googlegroups.com, "Gardening_Convert"
<colin.day@btinternet.com> wrote:
>
> Sacha wrote:
<snip>[color=darkred]
<snip>[color=darkred]
>
> chalk another one off to experience 
>
> It'll give me something else to grow for next year 
>
> Is now a good time to be taking cuttings from my other Rosemaries and
> if so what's the best method to do this ?
>
Now is a good time. Take a young 3" shoot which is torn off the parent
plant leaving a 'heel'. Plant up in potting compost and keep at around 15C.
You can either plant them round the edge of a pot, with say, 5 cuttings to a
1l pot, or if you have them, you can use plugs. Water from below but don't
overdo it! Bear in mind when you plant them out into the garden that
Rosemary likes fairly sandy, free-draining conditions and a lot of sun.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(email address on website)
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