In england burlap is called sackcloth i think.
Having lived in a damp country like england and a dry one like Spain were the potatoes start to lose their turgididty in a week or two, so it is better not to buy too many at a time unless you like cooking floppy potatoes but the bread never goes moldy, unless you keep it in plastic and can be used for crumbs a year, even years later while bread in england goes moldy and never dries out i could neveras a child understand about feeding people in dungeons on dry bread and water but in Spain i myself just eat up the dry bread if i have run out of fresh. Where the
compost dries out rapidly and all kitchen waste resembles bits of dry leather in a day or two while in England compost usually suffers from beign too wet, I would say that instructions about how long you have to keep something like a live tree damp for, should vary a lot according to the climate.
ALso i am not sure it would be possible to keep a bought tree alive without watering it through its first summer in spain. maybe if your
swale system were good
enough. agri rose macaskie.