Re: Viburnum - Snowball


If one of your neighbors would like these, it would be worthwhile to hire a
landscaper with the proper equipment to come and transplant them.  Your
neighbor would have to pay much more to buy a viburnum of an equivalent size.

Margot Kane
New York, NY

At 11:55 PM 11/17/97 -0800, you wrote:
>I have two of the deciduous, grape-leaf, large white flowering viburnum. 
>These have been trained to a single-stem tree form.  I'm planning to
>replace them with something more attractive in the future, but many of my
>neighbors would love to have them.  They are much too large (8 to 10 ft.)
>to remove and transplant.  What I would like to know is how and when to
>take cuttings, if that is even possible.  For me, these are much more
>trouble than they are worth - constant pruning due to poor placement by the
>gal who planted them unknown years ago.  It will probably be '99 before
>they get ripped out and replaced by something with a narrower spread.  Any
>help is appreciated.
>
>Katie
>La Grande, OR, US
>USDA Zone 5b/6a
>e-mail: kael@oregontrail.net
>
>The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one
>persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.  Therefore all
>progress depends on the unreasonable man.
>		-- George Bernard Shaw
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