Introduction:
The key point is this: Roots break easily if they are disturbed when they are frozen. This is important because
Placing Your Order in Freezing Weather:
Do not let the weather stop you ordering online and selecting your preferred delivery week as soon as possible.
This will:
Please remember that no money is taken from your card until right before delivery. Just e-mail us if you need to cancel your order.
We lift plants and pack and send them out to you whenever there is a break in the weather. However, because the carriers we use can face poor road conditions in cold weather, please recognise that delivery delays happen. In cold weatheryour plants will be fine; normally we say they can stay in their packaging for about 2 weeks but in near zero temperatures, that period is much longer.
What happens if I am frozen in all winter?
If your plants are stored outside, frozen and out of the sun, they need no attention at all and will be perfectly happy for months.
The winter planting season ends when spring begins, which usually means in early March.
However, long cold periods delay the onset of spring. If we have a hard winter, it will be safe to plant bareroot trees hedging later.
So there is no reason to panic or hurry!
When can I get planting?
Follow the country proverb "when the ground is soft enough to plant, the plants are soft enough to be planted".
When the soil turns easily, and the temperature is above freezing unpack your order. Wet its roots really well. Do not drown them, but leaving in a bucket of cold water for 6-8 hours will help them rehydrate. Keep them in a bucket and plant them straight from the bucket so the roots are sopping wet as they go into the ground. Otherwise plant them as normal. Please do not forget to water newly planted bareroot stock at least from mid March to the end of June. It is the single most important thing you can do to ensure quick establishment and healthy growth.
You can watch our How to Plant videos for more help with this bit:
Planting a country style hedge with a mulch mat.
Planting a formal garden hedge.
Planting a large Ornamental tree.
Planting a large fruit tree.
What if my soil freezes again after planting?
It does not matter. Your plants will be just fine. So:
We want to make it clear that all this fuss about frost only applies to the time you plant your trees. Almost all of the plants we grow are fully hardy and will do just fine once they are in the ground.
All of our native hedging plants and big trees are directly descended from plants (many still alive) that survived the fierce winters of the late 19th century and the 1940s. Some can probably trace their ancestry back to the Ice Age...