November care

Bald Cypress in November: monthly care

Month-by-month careTaxodium distichum

In November your bald Cypress needs attention: plant / sow.

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  • Plant / sow
Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum)
Foto: HoroshilovAleksandr / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0

What to do this November

Plant / sow

Bald cypress thrives in full sun and tolerates a wide range of moisture conditions, from permanently waterlogged ground to ordinary garden soil, making it unusually versatile for a conifer. Choose a site with plenty of space: mature trees reach 15–30 metres tall with a spread of 6–10 metres. Plant bare-root or container-grown specimens in March, April, October, or November when the tree is dormant and the soil is workable. Prepare the planting hole to twice the width of the root ball but no deeper, so the tree sits at the same level it grew in the nursery. Bald cypress tolerates clay, loam, and peat soils, and actually prefers moisture-retentive ground. If your soil is very dry or sandy, incorporate plenty of organic matter to improve water retention. Space trees at least 8 metres apart to allow for their mature canopy spread. Position the tree in the hole, backfill with the excavated soil, and firm gently with your heel to eliminate air pockets. Water thoroughly after planting—this is critical even in autumn or winter. Apply a 7–10 cm layer of organic mulch (composted bark or leaf mould) around the base, keeping it clear of the trunk itself to prevent rot. Stake young trees with a single angled stake and a flexible tie if the site is exposed to wind, but remove the stake after one or two growing seasons. Keep the root zone consistently moist through the first summer, especially if rainfall is sparse. Bald cypress develops characteristic "knees" (aerial roots) when grown in waterlogged conditions, which is normal and not a cause for concern.

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