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Good day!
I prepared a 600mm tall raised bed for my kumquat calamondin tree due to garden soil not suitable for in ground planting.
My biggest dilemma at the moment is strong wind beating my fruit tree. Based on the attached photo showing where the raised bed will be permanently installed, what would you suggest for me to make or buy as wind barrier for my fruit tree?
I have not transplanted yet, when transplanted on this raised bed the tree will be at 1.5m high from the ground.
Thanks in advanced. Cheers!
Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community @GarryM. It's fantastic to have you join us and many thanks for your question.
I'd start by investing in a good thick stake similar to Lattice Makers 38 x 38 x 1800mm Single Hardwood Garden Stake. Try to place it as central as possible in the raised bed and firmly attach the trunk of the kumquat to it with jute webbing.
In most normal circumstances that would be all that is needed to support a fruit tree. If for some reason you experience higher than normal winds in that position you could look a creating a wind barrier. Obviously, you would want it to be functional but still look nice too.
I could suggest some of these as options:
You could cement a couple of timber posts into the ground and fix the panel to them. Alternatively, using a couple of Whites 180cm Premium Black Ultraposts would also work. Installing any of the panels would certainly reduce the wind buffeting the tree.
Please let me know if you need further assistance or had any questions.
Mitchell
Thanks @MitchellMc for the great and detailed tips! I am very excited to do the transplant today 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙂
Make sure you post some photos once you do as I trust our members would like to see your efforts.
Mitchell
Hi @GarryM and @MitchellMc
I just planted to japanese maples as saplings and I am very concerned about strong winds and summer heat.
@MitchellMc adding th stake is first thing to do second is s screening panel to the hot sun at 3pm approximatly.
I have supported my trees with stakes and soft ties and the next step is tallest stakes i can get and make a trianguler shade cloth shelter until they out grow the shelter.
I also used a product call Yates drought shield It puts a breathable biodegradable polymer. that protects
Hello @Jewelleryrescue
I agree that adding stakes and tying off the young tree for extra support is a good way to prevent the tree from being blown away. Once the tree is strong enough to stand on its own, the stakes will no longer be necessary. Just letting you know that if you are after the Yates 2.5L Waterwise DroughtShield Leaf Protectant Ready-to-Use, it can be ordered at the special orders desk.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Eric
Thanks for looking Good to know I can order yates drought shield through Bunnings
Saves me trips else where.
For some reason my Bunnings search on line for it was a not product found . maybe I did a typo
I've always been told the best way to assist a tree to develop strong roots in windy situations is to lightly support them and to not tie them firmly to one or more stakes. The thinking being that once you do remove the stakes the trees aren't used to the movement so often fall over in the first big wind.
Is what you have suggested new thinking on this?
I live in Jindabyne and our top gusts over the year can reach 180km/hr as we are on the eastern side of the lake. I was advised by local gardeners not to stake my large trees and it seems to be working
Hi @podlet
Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community. Thank you for joining the discussion.
What you've mentioned is actually spot on. It's only necessary to support the tree while it's very young. Sometimes very strong gusts of wind push very young trees too far and harm their growth. What I should have said was to loosely tie the tree to the stake to prevent overbending. The tree should still be free to move about in the wind and not be kept stationary. For larger developed trees, it's not necessary to tie them to stakes.
Eric
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