The Easiest Way To Start Growing Fruit In Your Garden

Posted on: 14 September 2021

For many people, gardening is more of a chore than a joy, and mowing the lawn once a fortnight during spring and summer is anything but joyous. However, planting and growing some fruit trees can change all that. Having some fruit that you grew yourself in your fridge can be quite a rewarding feeling, but how does a beginner start? Here is why you should start with bare root fruit trees and how you move forward with this plan from here.

What Are Bare Root Plants?

Basically, you can either buy a plant that comes with its own soil and mulch in a little pot, you can buy the seeds and grow them from scratch or you can buy bare root options that come with all the roots exposed, ready to be planted. Bare root fruit trees are not only easier to plant because there is less cleaning you need to do to remove the soil they came in, but they are harvested around winter so that they can last longer in their current state and explode in growth when finally planted. This makes them ideal for people who may be new to fruit gardening and want to see quicker results for their efforts.

Safer And Easier For You

Potted trees always come with some level of risk that you might get infected growth from the soil and transfer it to your current garden. Bare root fruit trees eliminate that possibility and reduce the cost of delivery because there is less weight and the trees can be packaged with less material. If you bundle them together, as most people want more than just a single plant when starting out, then this can lead to even further savings and a quicker turnaround for fruit!

How To Start

All you need is a fairly open area of your garden that gets plenty of sunlight and you can begin looking for your particular type of bare root fruit trees. With spring approaching, looking for fruits that flower in the summer is a good idea so that you give it some time to get settled if it has already begun producing fruit. Most of the time, it will take a few years for the tree to mature and take hold. Trees are a lot easier to care for, however, than most of your garden. Apart from some shaping here or there, bare root fruit trees are resilient enough to mostly handle themselves, which is ideal for someone who wants minimal maintenence. 

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