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Some of the newly planted Murraya Hedges dying

pkhedkar07
Just Starting Out

Some of the newly planted Murraya Hedges dying

Hello,

 

Appreciate your help. Last year, I planted 70+ murraya hedges along the front boundary perimeter facing east, northeast and north directions adding fertilizer at that time. All of them have a weed mat and cowra white 40mm pebbles underneath. 

The ones on the east and north east side are growing ok however, the ones on the north side are either dying or yellowing out with hardly any growth. I have been providing slow release granule fertilizer and seasol tonic to all periodically but don't see any improvement.

 

I am unable to figure out what is the issue which is affecting some of them but not all. If weedmat and pebbles is the problem, not sure why it affects only the ones on the north side.

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JacobZ
Bunnings Team Member
Bunnings Team Member

Re: Some of the newly planted Murraya Hedges dying

Hi @pkhedkar07,

 

A warm welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community and thank you for your question.

 

Did the plants on the north side grow well to a point and then suddenly start to struggle? Did you add any soil to the garden beds when you were planting the murrayas?

 

If the plants were growing well and then they suddenly started to struggle, I suspect the issue is likely due to soil conditions and the retention of water in the soil under the failing plants.

 

The soil underneath could be heavy in clay, which can cause it to retain too much moisture, which can lead to waterlogged roots. This can stunt growth and cause yellowing or dying plants.

 

We'll need to do some investigating to confirm or disprove my suspicions. Can I ask you to pull back the stones around the base of the struggling trees and upload an image of the soil beneath? Is it similar to the soil underneath the plants that are thriving? How moist is it?

 

If it is as I suspect an issue with the soil, then the best course of action would be dependant on what you find.

 

It could be to aerate the soil with a hand fork and add organic matter in the form of compost or manure to encourage microbial growth and burrowing insects in the soil. If you find there is a heavy clay layer, applying gypsum to the soil and mixing it in will help to break up the clay.

 

It would also be worthwhile to test the pH balance of the soil with a Manutec Garden Care Products Soil PH Test Kit. If the soil is outside of the recommended range, between 6.0 and 7.5, then we should take steps to bring the soil back within this range. Have a look at How To Test And Adjust Your Soil pH for some guidance.

 

Allow me to tag some of our experienced gardeners such as @Noelle, @mich1972 and @robchin for their thoughts.

 

Let me know what you find when you inspect the soil around these plants. I am happy to assist further if required.

 

Jacob

 

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