Boo Rescue

This weekend ended up being a boo weekend. I potted up the Henon I got from JM Bamboo, potted up my yearling Moso seedlings, and today I went out to rescue the boo that was suffering at the back of my property.

4 Year Old Boo - Drought Affected
4 Year Old Boo - Drought Affected
And it’s a good thing I got the gumption to do it too. This boo has been in that soil for over 4 years. By all means, it should be 10′ tall or taller by now and be a nice clump. I had dug this boo up from a very lovely road-side patch next to a vineyard I was visiting here in town. Sadly, they have since bull-dozed that patch, tho I may revisit it and see if they missed anything. It was taller than the power-pole that it grew around - likely the reason it was bull-dozed - and the culms were at least 2″ in diameter. Very straight, very green and beautiful to behold.

I dug up three rhizomes from this patch. Since I had a drip-irrigated little vineyard at the back of my property, I planted them out by that in hopes to form a hedge along the back of the fence. The drip kept them alive - but at the time I didn’t know that my top-soil and subsoil back there was only perhaps a foot deep - that entire part of the property is sitting on a sandstone shelf, as you will see when I get pictures posted of my pit greenhouse. So, neither the grapes nor the bamboo did well.

Dug Up Boo
Dug Up Boo
A severe drought a year later hit us and really kept my drip busy. Even so the vines and boo didn’t have enough depth of soil to grow significantly. That winter I didn’t irrigate - shouldn’t have had to - but all my grapes grafted on root-stock died - they budded just fine that Spring, but with dead root-stock, there was nothing to keep them alive. Fortunately, my boo survived and all my own-roots grapes survived.

Last year I dug up the grapes - they spent that year in containers getting some growth on - and they grew like weeds! At the time, the boo just wasn’t up on my list of priorities, plus it was a very wet spring so I let them be. However, this spring, on inspection - where there were three patches I had planted, now there was only one. So, it’s time to rescue…

Potted Up Boo
Potted Up Boo
Inspired by my recent potting up of my yearling Moso seedlings and potting of the Henon boo, I decided that it was time to take shovel to dirt and dig that boo up. I had hoped there would be more rhizome than there was - it was pretty pathetic, sadly - it was smaller than it was when I originally planted it. I dug the shovel down deep and came up with a large chunk of soil with the boo and brought it back to be cleaned up. I removed more soil than what remained. My timing couldn’t have been better - this boo was clearly in decline. I didn’t remove all the dirt from the roots - I didn’t want to stress this boo any more than necessary. Still, most of the dirt came off.

Since it was so small, rather than using a 25 gallon container, I decided to pot this puppy in a 3-gallon container instead. I used the same layered technique that I used on the Henon and Moso - compost and leaves on the bottom, then enough soil to cover them, then another layer of leaves and so forth until it was high enough - after compacting - to sit the root-ball at a comfortable level. In went the root-ball and more layering around it, compacted tightly until it was level. I packed in some leaves and leaf-mold on top of that as a kind of mulch and that was that.

Home in the Greenhouse
Home in the Greenhouse
Since it went into a smaller container and with a few more cold nights left to this winter, I put this one down in the greenhouse next to the Moso. It’s a bit pathetic looking right now, but if the potted up grapes are any indicator, this boo is going to have a very good year. I already saw one shoot fixing to rise up as I was potting it up, so it’s still growing and it still has potential. Before long this diminutive little boo may be the parent to a nice little screening patch.

Stumble it!

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