Paulownia stooled

Other plants we have or landscape elements like ponds.

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johnw
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Location: HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA

Paulownia stooled

Post by johnw »

These Paulownia tomentosa in Kentville in the Annapolis Valley here were stooled in May. The tallest on the extreme left hit 15 feet from ground to tip as of today. Stinking hot there today - plus 29c.

johnw
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Paulownia tomentosa IMG-20130821-04840.jpg
johnw coastal Nova Scotia
johnw
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Re: Paulownia stooled

Post by johnw »

And the one with the best shape and hardiest is in its 9th growing season from seed! (Obviously not stooled!)

The seed came from hardy ones growing in Niagara Falls, Ontario. It is just now producing masses of flower buds.
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Paulownia tomentosa best IMG-20130821-04846.jpg
Paulownia tomentosa best IMG-20130821-04842.jpg
Paulownia tomentosa best IMG-20130821-04843.jpg
johnw coastal Nova Scotia
GrowingHabit
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Re: Paulownia stooled

Post by GrowingHabit »

johnw wrote:These Paulownia tomentosa in the Annapolis were stooled
johnw
One hesitates to ask... but what happens to a tree when its stooled?
canadianplant
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Re: Paulownia stooled

Post by canadianplant »

Think of pollarding/coppacing. Basically you cut the tree to a stump to produce the super large leaves.
GrowingHabit
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Re: Paulownia stooled

Post by GrowingHabit »

I thought it was probably another word for coppicing and pollarding. Wheew.

I planted a Paulownia here in Southern Oregon nearly 5 years ago. I read ahead of time all about them, because I hadn't encountered one in person. They're not common in my area. The claims were that they have multiple tap roots, and go straight down. Ehem. My driveway is now a disaster zone, and the roots are headed for the foundation. In fact, they've reached the slab the garage sits on, and are bulging upward where its halted them so far. They're heaving the asphalt like a breaching Loch Ness Monster. The tree is huge. We've discussed cutting it down, but the damage is done and I'm not sure we can get rid of it that way. Now we're considering cutting a deep barrier and pouring concrete, which would involve cutting the gigantic roots causing the problem, and taking up a lot of asphalt to get them out, then repaving... Or hoping they rot and smack 'em down with a backhoe bucket. So far, no real solution has been settled on, and the roots have heaved the asphalt more than a foot and a half in some places. The thing is a beast.
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