Dwarf trees are a great addition to your terrace garden Who says trees need to be rooted to the ground? Like Dr. Radhika Balakrishnan, you could grow them easily on your terrace. Her terrace garden is home to dwarf varieties of drumstick, lemon, allamanda, parijat and oleander trees. The saplings are planted in grow bags of 18” diameter- 24” height. Landscapist Lakshmi Sriram, who helped plant these trees-in-pots, recommends a soil mix of vermicompost, decomposed cow dung or goat peat, neem cake powder, red soil, river sand and coco peat. “Trees on the terrace require five litres of water every day, but don’t water in excess, as this would drain out nutrients from the soil,” says Lakshmi.
As a pest deterrent, give
these trees a fortnightly spray of neem oil based bio-pesticide and
panchagavya, mixing about 2 ml of each in a litre of water. The
drumstick trees grew to a height of three feet within a year, and
started yielding from the seventh month. To ensure a rich yield, you
need to harvest its leaves once in 10 days.
Drumstick leaves being nutrient-rich, this is a happy proposition.
Another charm of dwarf drumstick (chedi murungai) and dwarf parijat trees is they don’t attract kambli poochi (woollen
caterpillars) that attack their regular varieties. As for lemon trees,
you could let its foliage grow wild. Expect a yield within a month of
planting it. The dwarf allamanda grows to six or seven feet. Maximise
its flower yield by continuously pruning it. Meanwhile,
the dwarf parijat starts flowering within two months of planting, and
grows to a height of four to five feet. Dwarf oleander trees too flower
in a matter of months, and reach a height of five to six feet. These
trees are perennial. While September is the best time to start planting
on the terrace, if you want to start right away, use overhead green
nets to cut off 50 per cent of the sunlight. http://www.thehindu.com/features/homes-and-gardens/trees-on-your-terrace/article7015290.ece
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