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Re: Propagating Texas Madrone
- To: s*@eskimo.com
- Subject: Re: Propagating Texas Madrone
- From: G*@aol.com
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 10:41:54 EST
- Resent-Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 07:42:43 -0800
- Resent-From: seeds-list@eskimo.com
- Resent-Message-ID: <"fmS3F2.0.rc7.nd6vq"@mx1>
- Resent-Sender: seeds-list-request@eskimo.com
Sounds like you have no trouble propagating but sustaining your trees. Are
you growing them where they grow wild or are you trying to grow them in an
area difficult for the trees? When I lived in California , I was surrounded
by native Madrones. The soil was well drained, the summers dry. If they
happened to grow in low spots, they oftened died from root rot. I now live in
the southeast, coastal plains and I know they could not survive. I have
planted redwood seeds here from coastal California and my little seedlings
struggle so. Some things are not worth growing out of their natural habitate
unless you can keep them small enough to grow in an artficial climate to
suite them like a greenhouse.
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