Planting Fruit Trees In Your Backyard - Best and Large Bing Stella Cherries, Plums, Peaches, Apples

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Follow these steps to grow the best and largest fruits and yields right at home or backyard. This video demonstrates step by step how to easily plant fruit trees that require pollination such as Bing and Stella Cherry or self pollinating trees such as peaches.

Eat fresh fruits daily from your garden. Give a person an apple feed them once, teach a person how to plant an apple fruit tree feed them for a lifetime.
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Nice to see jon voight planting cherry trees.

bobbyricky
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Thank U for not blasting us with music.... Just great to hear your voice & watching you work
👍🏾

Liveyourlifewithafatcigar
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Nice and large backyard. It looks so serene.

ruthwolf
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I just got my bing cherry today. I hope it can be grow in Georgia. Thank for your video

PhuongNguyen-unho
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Great video, do you have any updates on how the tree is doing now in spring 2021??

marks
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Keep the videos coming. Your video was short and on point.

greenhousefun
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Awesome video, .. straight to the point 👍🏼

ShortCutLawn
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NO COMPOSTING!! Master gardening classes have said that a fruit tree should be planted in the native soil … NO FERTILIZER OR COMPOST so that the roots will expand and move through out the dirt and not just where you have cultivated the soil with compost.

rchristley
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I like your video thank you for you sharing this video.

vannaandpheapvideos
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Thanks for the video. I bought two cherry trees today, planted them, obviously wrong, i will redo tomorrow - dig a bigger hole and step around after i plant

JuniperJennifer
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Can the method described on the label be followed for planting any tree? Why do you add so much compost? Is it because the soil is clayish in nature? Near no soil is mixed with the compost! Thanks for this video. I liked the idea of the well around the tree.

Pete :")

alwayspete
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I Have This Thing As You Go Means From Home Theater

Feheehaadnam
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That's really a lot of compost plant the tree in. Seems like you should have mixed it with native soil, about 50/50

IamEddieLee
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U should put the soil on a huge cardboard, open up an Amazon box or something and place it beside the hole ur digging . Ull keep ur grass free of mud and clean this way

dns_error
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I planted a Stella 4 years ago. The tree is growing well but no fruit. Is this one a dud and I need to replace it?

brightonmusic
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I believe it is better practice to plant n square holes as circular holes can cause roots to go around in circles instead of penetrating the soil.

nataliealexander
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I am curious - the mulch with weed prevention... is that safe to use on a young fruit tree? I'd be more inclined to use non-colored, non treated mulch. Thoughts?

christopherfabian
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Why does my cherry tree have a sock on it? Also my dirt around my house is pretty much clay will my tree grow fine?

thereelingredhead
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Thank you for this! Very informative. Do you recommend dwarf cherry or a full size tree?

paigeburton
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The editing and narrating were all great, but this is not a good approach at planting ant type of tree.  
When you are planting a tree root flare depth is of prime importance. If you plant the tree deep in the ground so that the root flare is covered with soil, the roots cannot access the oxygen the tree requires. The key to determining root flare depth when you are planting is to make a point of finding the root flare before putting the tree in the ground. Even in container-grown or ball-and-burlap trees, the tree flare can be covered by soil. Carefully remove the soil around the tree’s roots until you locate the tree flare. Dig a planting hole sufficiently shallow so that when the tree is placed in it, the flare is fully visible above the soil line. If you are worried about disturbing the tree’s roots, dig a hole to the proper depth and place the entire root ball in it. Then remove the excess soil until the root flare is fully exposed. Only then backfill the hole up to the base of the root flare. Remember that the root flare is actually part of the trunk, not the roots. That means it will rot if consistently exposed to moisture, as it will be under the soil. The tissue that rots is the phloem, responsible for the distribution of energy manufactured in the leaves. If phloem deteriorates, the tree is no longer able to use food energy for growth. Adjusting for proper root flare depth is essential to maintaining a healthy tree.


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