Can you plant a Christmas tree after Christmas?
Category:
home and garden
landscaping
Replanting Cut Trees Isn't Possible
However, even a freshly cut tree has been separated from its roots and replanting a Christmas tree without roots simply isn't possible. If you're determined to plant your Christmas tree, purchase a tree with a healthy root ball that has been securely wrapped in burlap.
Herein, what do you do with your real Christmas tree after Christmas?
Some of the things that you can do with your tree include;
- Mulching. Mulching is one of the best ways to recycle your real Christmas tree.
- Make it a wildlife habitat.
- Thriving fish reserve.
- Firewood.
- Ash the garden to make it more fertile.
- Real Christmas trees can serve as garden insulators.
- Home fresheners.
- Beautiful coasters.
- Acclimate the tree.
- Dig the planting hole.
- Remove the burlap from the root ball and all other coverings.
- Place the tree into the hole, backfill with the excavated soil and tamp gently every layer.
- Cover the hole with several inches of mulch.
- Water deeply.
Likewise, when should I replant my Christmas tree?
THE BEST WAY TO PLANT YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE. Your tree, which must have roots to be planted outside, should go into the garden soon after Christmas, and no later than 1 January. It will sit happily in a pot filled with compost for months but will need cold and damp to survive.
Many evergreen trees used for cut Christmas trees, often members of the pine family, are difficult or impossible to propagate from cuttings. The cuttings from any plant must be carefully taken from the proper part of the plant and treated in an appropriate way. See: TAKE CUTTINGS.