Moving Plants: How To Move a Farden to a New Home


 

Packing for a move to a new home is never easy. Most people don’t talk about the difficulty or emotions of navigating an entire garden even after checking information in https://apps.apple.com/us/app/lily-plant-identification/id1570145257.  Join me on my own journey to relocate a 10-year-old garden and all my tips on plant relocation and garden packing. I have lived in my house for 10 years and said goodbye to my current garden. I’ve moved before and built a whole garden, but this move is much more difficult for me. This is the first garden my children have enjoyed and I  love large gardens. 

I made a video of my garden a few months before we moved. 

I never intended to leave this garden. Sometimes life gets in the way and we have to deal with our situation. So 10 years later, I cleaned up the house and started moving the plants to new rooms.

During this process, I had to go through a lot of heartaches. Many other gardeners shared similar stories about how difficult it is to say goodbye to their plants and the happy farm they’ve known for years.

But the story is always about new beginnings. and ends with the delight of a brand-new garden. 

During the move, I recorded everything I did (and wanted to do) when I started moving the plants to their new homes. When it’s time to say goodbye to your garden, I hope my experience helps make the process smoother for you. 

Do you really need this plant? 

When I first moved into the garden, I had a very hard time imagining leaving all the plants behind. I didn’t want to waste my hard work in the first garden! With each daily visit, I knew my plants would become friends and  I would miss them.  I spent an inordinate amount of time digging up and dividing all my perennials. I did too. I planted them all in 15 and 10-gallon kid pots. 

I plan to transplant it as if I  bought it at the garden store and planted it in a new garden. However, this move required an entire moving truck. I cheated on you It was very expensive. It will probably cost more than going to the nursery and buying the same plant again. 

Certain mountain plants cannot be priced, of course. A reader of Garden Therapy shared with me a story of her garden transformation. She had a bittersweet plant her brother-in-law gifted her over 50 years ago. When choosing between expensive and practical plants, he knew that amaryllis was the most important plant to transplant.

Establish these limits when moving plants to new homes. Please try to Here are the plants you should like. 

Transplantation of a rare and hard-to-find plant. 

A plant of sentimental value. 

Some plants that will make your garden feel like home.