Planting Guide for California
Native Plants 2009
How to plant DROUGHT TOLERANT PLANTS
- Dig a hole of a size into which the plant will fit.
- Carefully remove the plastic bag or plastic pot from around
the plant and recycle bag/pot.
- Carefully place the plant into the hole, slightly higher
than the surrounding soil. Disturb
the root ball as little as possible.
- DO NOT ADD AMENDMENTS, just plant in native soil.
- DO NOT ADD FERTILIZER.
- Backfill the hole with soil.
- Water lavishly (lots and lots, like 30 gallons. If it
rains, five inches right after you
plant, skip.) We water an area for 8-12 hours with a
sprinkler
if we plant in spring/summer/fall.
- How to Water (After the First Watering): DO NOT
USE DRIP IRRIGATION. Use microspray
emitters or low volume sprinklers instead, so that the plant will be
irrigated in a pattern more similar to rainfall. Do not water against
the crown (the main stem of the plant at the soil surface) of the
plant. Water should fall in the area of the drip line of the plant
and beyond. Do not blast the plant's stem for ten minutes and call it
a day.
- For perennials and subshrubs, place a rock
next to the plant, on the west or south side of it.
- Place mulch on top of the soil around the plant in a
four-foot-
diameter circle.
Mulch Types: A. Desert plants-
use rocks. B. Perennials and subshrubs-
shredded redwood
bark or shredded cedar bark.
C. Long-lived trees and
shrubs- mostly evergreen oak leaf mulch or shredded redwood
bark
or shredded cedar bark.
- The first year-check the soil,
down about an inch or two, once a week; if it is
dry,
water it; if it is moist, don't water it.
- The second and
succeeding year-water, if needed, during the months of November
through April, and try to abstain from watering in the summer
(excepting desert plants, which receive summer rain showers, and
sprinkling for coastal plants that normally receive fog drip/;summer
rain showers ).
- Depending on the origin of the plant,
you may need to water extra or not. If the plant originates from an
area with equal amounts of rainfall and equal rainfall patterns, you
don't need to water extra; if the plant originates from an area of
higher rainfall or different rainfall patterns, you may need to water
extra. Plant a redwood in Barstow, water it, plant a cactus in Eureka, don't water it.
For riparian or wetland plants
A rock for mulch is good. Organic mulch can sometimes cause
problems for these plants. They need a constant source of moisture.
Plant your native tree, shrub, or perennial in the ground
near
a water source such as a bird bath, pond, dripping faucet, etc. where
the plant will receive regular water. DRIP IRRIGATION IS OK
FOR
RIPARIAN PLANTS.
For desert plants
Use a 30-50 pound rock next to each plant. Preferably on the
south
side. Temperatures and moisture are dramatically moderated with the
rock.
If you can't plant your plants immediately, poke a few holes in the bottom of the bag, place in morning sun or part shade, water once or twice a week if needed. Relax, we've left them in the bags for months with no problems.