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Backfill and water. Holding the rose at the right planting depth, fill the hole with soil, working it carefully around the roots. When the hole is nearly full, water thoroughly to settle the soil.

 


Backfill some soil into the hole. Next, place the tree in the center of the hole. Lay a dowel over the hole to gauge the planting depth. Plant the tree at the same level as it was growing before.

Backfill holes with existing unamended soil. Do not incorporate organic matter such as peatmoss into backfill for individual planting holes.

Backfill, all the spaces between the plants by hand with moist but not too wet potting soil. It should still be able to flow into the crevices. Push the soil in lightly and finish by watering thoroughly to allow the potting soil to settle down.

Backfill the hole with soil to about one-half its depth. Water well to settle the soil around the roots and eliminate air pockets. Adjust the plant to the proper depth, then fill the hole to ground level.

6. Backfill the area behind the retaining wall with gravel to cover the drainage pipe. Continue backfilling with soil until the desired height is reached.
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Amend backfill, the soil removed from the planting hole. Add one part organic material, such as peat, compost or well-rotted manure, to two parts soil. Fill in the planting hole, but don't stomp down the soil.

4. Backfill the hole with the soil you saved. When it's half filled, water the soil to settle it.
5. Continue filling the hole to the top. Tamp the soil to eliminate large air pockets, but don't compact it.

3. The loose backfill in the hole allows for the developing root system to get a firm foothold to grow.

Third, when backfilling the hole or container, be sure to make sure that the soil is firmly in place around the root ball. If a pocket of air is created, the tree will die.

Tamp down the backfill immediately adjacent to the edging using your foot sideways (compact the soil). The level of the soil should come up to, but not above, the top of the edging. Adjust the soil height as needed and tamp again.
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When you're done backfilling, water the hedge thoroughly. You may also want to lay mulch over the filled trench and plants to help keep the soil cool and moist and discourage weeds.

Put a cross member on top of these two posts, then place a spirit level on top to check they're level; if they're not, infill or backfill the holes as necessary until they are.
Repeat this with the remaining uprights until all are level.

To plant, dig a hole twice the size of the container it comes in; don't enrich the soil you use to backfill the hole unless it's almost pure sand (in which case, add compost or composted manure).

In the old days, gardeners were told to prepare an asparagus bed by digging an 18' deep trench and then backfilling it with a mix of compost and soil.

Many gardeners throw away the rocky, poor soil, and backfill with potting soil or other rich amendment. That is not going to help the plant at all.

Work up the soil from the hole so it's porous, friable and easy to add as backfill. When transplanting the tree, dig a clean root ball that will enclose all its roots.

Once it is level with 4 to 5 inches of water, backfill any gaps around the edges with sieved subsoil. Continue to fill the pond, checking that it remains level and backfill any gaps that appear between the shell and surrounding soil.

Eliminate air pockets that can kill the tree's roots by backfilling the hole about half way and saturating the soil with water. After the water drains, continue backfilling.

This is accomplished with gravel backfill, or manufactured drainage blankets and drain pipes. Structural walls require "weep" holes to allow water to drain from behind the wall.
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Set your posts in the holes and fill the holes. Use a level while backfilling the holes to ensure that the posts are vertical.
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Cut your plywood to the length and width of your beds.

Container soils, in particular, have a bad habit of drying out much faster than the surrounding or backfill soils.

1. Digging the hole. Dig a hole twice as wide as and slightly shallower than the root ball. This puts the backfill soil where the new tree roots will grow and leaves a base of naturally firm soil for the root ball to rest on.

Push the mixed soil into the hole so it fills halfway. Soak the hole with water. Backfill the hole with the remainder of the dirt to plant the oleander bush at the same level as it was in its nursery package.

Backfill the soil and be sure not to compact the soil. Water well to fill in any loose soil.
-Add 2 inches of mulch around the perimeter of the plants staying away from the center. This will keep the soil evenly moist and conserve moisture.

As you firm the soil in around the roots, hold the plant as straight as you can so when you are finished you don't have tree or shrub that lists to one side. As you are backfilling, ...

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Then they recommended putting in drainage, either with pipes or gravel, before backfilling. The soil would be mixed with equal amounts of compost, leaves, manure, or even straw before it was put back into the garden bed.

All walls should provide for the back-of-wall water to freely drain down and away from the wall. This is accomplished with gravel backfill, or manufactured drainage blankets and drain pipes.

Unstaked trees move in the wind and the root system can become weeak as a result. Backfill around your tree and water in well. Placing some straw around your tree will help prevent weeds and also a good mulch like straw, will help conserve water. ...

Space the plants evenly along the row at the recommended distance. If you want a particularly wide, dense hedge, put the plants in a double, staggered row. Form the soil well around the roots of each plant as you backfill.

If you need to stabilize the slope, add small, stacked-stone retaining walls backfilled with good soil. They'll serve the additional purpose of creating more planting pockets for plants, particularly suited to those that require perfect drainage.

Fork the bed well, digging in generous amounts of mature compost and loosening the soil deeply. Set each crown so that the rhizomes are below grade, with the leaf shoots at grade, then backfill the planting hole firmly and water well to eliminate ...

Re-pot any root-bound plants by placing in a slightly larger pot and backfilling with a good quality potting mix.
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See also: Plant, Soil, Water, Planting, Grow