I would be faster and easier to get cuttings next summer. If they just cut them down each year... you'll be fine. You just make sure you get the berries before they disappear!
Debbie
If you don't care about the erosion problems you'll create in the ditch, dig them up.
Bob, I have never met PWR but from his postings on here that are helpful to all and the positive attitude displayed I would doubt that he would be so irrisponsible to dig one big hole and clear out the bank but would instead sample up and down the canal and knock off the dirt to get bare rooted plants. MO probably has a source for native elderberry plants to restore wildlife habitat, that might be an easier way to get them, they are usually cheap that way. Our conservation program doesnt supplly elderberries unfortunately or we could have used some fallow fields to plant elderberries in. CC
I wasn't implying anything negative ... a better choice of words would have been somerthing like, "... if potential erosion isn't an issue ..."
And yes, we have an excellent conservation nursery. Elderberries have been $7/25 one year old bare root plants.
Anyway ... yes, those road crew brush-hoggers are a pain in the neck!
Bob, can you post their address ...
Crackedcork
I thought they WERE hybrids... WOW. So they will stay true even though they are cross pollinated with the others? I hadn't thought about that aspect!
Debbie
Berlin... near Oshkosh.
Debbie
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