Maybe I should rethink that title…. don’t need the porn spammers dropping by again.
Anyway, after we planted our free trees the other day we had to do something with this under performing flowering plum that was now ruining the alignment.

We planted 2 of these before the big barn construction began, but one died and the survivor gets eaten alive by Japanese beetles every year. I was all for heaving it, but the husband had other ideas.
When my mother died in 2014, she was cremated and I planted some of her ashes with a lovely tulip tree in our backyard.

It did well for 4-5 years until we had crazy late spring freezes and frosts that it couldn’t tolerate.
Since I planned to replace it this year? Husband decided to do a little transplanting.

I (very helpfully) told him we’d need a bigger hole since we were moving a mature 12 year old tree with an extensive root system. With this (ever so helpful) advice, he did what he always does….. and promptly ignored it.

Digging up the plum was an absolute nightmare. The roots were thick and deep and under the topsoil? Hard clay that might as well be cement.

Our farming neighbor offered to come over with his backhoe and scoop it right up, but no.

The husband didn’t want to tear up his lawn and went with the spiderweb approach to removal.
It took us approximately two hours of digging and tugging and even then we ended up chopping what had to be 10 foot long roots.
Whoever said gardening isn’t a workout needs to be bitch slapped.

This photo caught the other half gasping for air after the last pull.

I had serious doubts the hole out back was large enough, but away we went.
Yeah, not quite.

There was a lot of twisting. And turning. And laughing. ( Okay, that was just me. Husband didn’t find it the least bit amusing. )
Some quite inventive spiderweb root trench digging later……

He made it work.

Whether it survives is anyone’s guess.
LOTS AND LOTS OF WATER. Do you have a soaker hose? That would do the trick and prevent a sore back from hauling water……
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Thankfully we had a soaking rain the day after. And it sits at the bottom of a little rise so it’s rarely ever bone dry.
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Good…..fingers crossed!!
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Wishing it all the best.
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It… and I … thank you.
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“Maybe I should rethink that title” You just have a dirty mind young lady!!
Here hubby does all this work JUST FOR YOU and you pick on him during the whole replanting–bad girl!!
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I wasn’t picking. I was being helpful…
😉
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😂
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It must survive, too much love has been put in!
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No to mention sweat and sore muscles. Yes!
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Tough job.. we’re watching a transplant of our own decide on whether or not it wants to stay with us 😂. Try a little sugar in the water .. I enjoyed that thanks for sharing ☘️🎈
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Sugar? That’s interesting…. I shall. Thanks!
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Good grief. I’ll bet he’s sore today after all that digging!
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Not just him!
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Love the title…🤣
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You loving it is fine. But I’ve had some strange spammers I’d rather not return.
😉
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Yikes!
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I hope it does survive! Oh my gosh, I would never turn down a backhoe!
I planted a tulip tree in 2014 — my daughter got a free seedling. It didn’t make it. Sad, but my neighbor has one and I enjoy it.
Gardening is a workout! I’m always trying to explain this to people who don’t garden. I think they imagine PLANTING, not gardening!
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It’s hard work and takes a lot of time…. but we do love it.
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Me tooooo!
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