Michael Cox wrote:It sounds interesting, if nothing else. I'm not sure WHY you want to do this though?
oh i just thought it would be pleasing to have a living stump to sit on, and to be able to point at tangible evidence of that lovely "cooperative living" Jay's talking about
also seems good not to waste that valuable root/fungi system -- if the living stump doesn't pan out i think i'll plant a new tree one foot over
part of me was hoping there might be some natural magic like "spread yogurt on the stump and bark will grow over!" -- but after reading through yall's responses (thank you!), it makes so much more sense to think about the essential circumstances to support a tree that can't photosynthesize for itself:
* is there a reliable surplus of water?
* are there enough non-stump trees nearby?
i think there's enough water around, but my stump is separated from mature forest by about 100' of grass, which seems too far... buuut that forest is in almost all directions (it's kinda at the middle of a clearing), maybe if lots of trees reach out to connect?
probably not, i'm thinking -- unless the stump starts barking soon i'll go with plan plant-a-new-tree
super interesting learning about living stumps, tho! hoping to meet one eventually.