Abraham Palma wrote:Hi Jon,
my saplings also die, but of thirst rather than critters. After some thought, I think that the problem is that the land is not ready for these saplings. In my case, there's not enough vegetation and shade to preserve the water for the new sapling. In your case, there might be not enough food for the critters, so they eat what they can find.
So I'd say that before the saplings, other species have to work in creating better conditions. Can you find another herb or shrub that could benefit some extra planting? In deserts, we need to leave some areas for water catchment, and plant where water can be concentrated. If you could make a few islands of increased vegetation around these spots, I'd say your saplings will have a better chance of surviving.
My trees aren't dying from lack of water
Abraham Palma wrote:
My trees aren't dying from lack of water
I never said so, please, read again.
I think that a possible cause that critters are destroying your sapplings is because they are easy prey. When we want to reforest in my country, we need to have first some bushes that hide and protect the tree saplings from critters.
Joseph Lofthouse wrote:You could try Mark Sheppard's STUN method. Sheer Total Utter Neglect. Plant thousands of trees, way too close together. Some of them might survive.
Abraham Palma wrote:Lofthouse advice sounds good to me.
Maybe if you can provide more specifics about your site:
Size, type of soil, established vegetation, stresses (other than the critters), location, a photo. The size of your saplings, are they one year old? More? Have you identified the critters?
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