Thought I'd get some group collaboration on the best route to go here.
Long story short, I have three plants I'd like to save that have been victims of "Unplanned, Overly Aggressive Pruning". There's about 2-3 inches of jagged wood pointing out of the ground for each plant. Is it best to leave them with angled spear-tips, or should I cut them flat, nearly flush with the ground, to minimize surface area of the delicate innards?
http://winnipegweather.com/
The weather over the next few days isn't enough to kill a healthy plant, but is that cold enough to damage the healing process of these plants? Should I be digging them up with as much of the root system as possible, putting them into 5 gallon buckets, and getting them inside? If they go inside, should they go under a light or will that dry out and damage the exposed parts? Should I be covering the wound in any way?
Help me THP Kenobi, you're my only hope.
Long story short, I have three plants I'd like to save that have been victims of "Unplanned, Overly Aggressive Pruning". There's about 2-3 inches of jagged wood pointing out of the ground for each plant. Is it best to leave them with angled spear-tips, or should I cut them flat, nearly flush with the ground, to minimize surface area of the delicate innards?
http://winnipegweather.com/
The weather over the next few days isn't enough to kill a healthy plant, but is that cold enough to damage the healing process of these plants? Should I be digging them up with as much of the root system as possible, putting them into 5 gallon buckets, and getting them inside? If they go inside, should they go under a light or will that dry out and damage the exposed parts? Should I be covering the wound in any way?
Help me THP Kenobi, you're my only hope.