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Bareroot
from £7.99
13/09/2025
When receiving your first order of bareroot plants, whether they are hedging, young trees, large trees, rose or soft fruit bushes, there are some simple extra requirements compared to pot grown plants.
Bare root plants need their roots to remain moist:
It is fine to soak the roots underwater for up to 24 hours, but not for days.
When you receive your plants, you will naturally open the packaging and check your order.
Your plants will be fine for several days if you don’t give them a drink when they arrive, but for obvious reasons we don’t deliver them sopping wet.
So it’s recommended to:
‘Heeling in’ means burying the roots, leaving the trunks lying down at an angle so they can’t catch the wind and blow over.
Heeling in is a good way to store bareroot plants, but it is too much work no special benefit.
Your plant’s roots will be fine with their roots in bags out of the wind for weeks in winter.
Just wet them thoroughly soon after they arrive, then wrap them up well, letting the water drain from the bottom of the plastic bag.
If the weather is freezing when your plants arrive, it’s no problem: tuck the plant in a sheltered corner outside, let them freeze, follow our frozen care instructions, and simply wait till they thaw to move them.
Frozen roots are brittle, and should not be moved or planted.
Whether you are slit planting smaller hedging & trees, or trench planting bigger plants (what’s the difference between slit and trench planting?), correct planting depth is important:
At the moment of planting, look for the root collar on each plant. You can determine where it is from both
With big bareroot trees and large planting holes, it’s handy to have a straight stick or bamboo cane to check the planting level.
After planting and a good watering or heavy rain, the surrounding soil should be no higher than the root collar.
Inspect your new plants after heavy rain to check that it is washing the soil down, and not moving soil onto the base of the trunks.
The J root means that the ends of the roots are not sitting down in the hole properly, causing the root-tips to point back up at the sky.
This mistake is easy to make with smaller bareroot plants using the slit planting method, which is standard for planting bareroot country hedges.
It’s best to trim off long, thin straggly roots that won’t fit in a sensible hole.
Bareroot plants delivered in smaller sizes like 40/60cm or 60/80cm are often slit planted.
It’s important to close the slit well, don’t be gentle about using your body weight or tool to firm it back together.
Bareroot plants delivered in larger sizes over 80cm tall are planted in a trench like formal hedging, or planted in a hole for a tree.
All new plants need to be watered while they establish, even if they are drought tolerant when they settled in.