In this video, This Old House landscape contractor Roger Cook explains how to transplant a shrub.

Project details

Skill

Cost

Estimated Time

Steps for transplanting a shrub

  • Estimate the size of the shrub’s root ball.
  • Mark hole outline onto ground in new location with line-marking spray paint.
  • Dig a hole twice as wide as the root ball, and as deep as the root ball is high.
  • Use stout string to truss up the shrub’s branches.
  • Dig a trench all around the base of the shrub with a pointed shovel.
  • Use a straight-blade transplanting shovel to dig under root ball of shrub.
  • Push the shrub over onto its side.
  • Slide a plastic tarp under the root ball.
  • Push the shrub upright onto the tarp.
  • Drag the shrub over to new hole by pulling on the tarp.
  • Measure the height of the root ball.
  • Pull a string across hole and measure its depth; it should equal the height of the root ball.
  • Set the shrub in the hole, then cut the strings holding the branches.
  • Backfill around the shrub with soil mixed with slow-release fertilizer and superphosphate.
  • Water thoroughly every day for a week, then every other day throughout the summer.

Tools

Tools & Materials

  • Pointed shovel
  • Transplanting spade
  • Tape measure