This past winter I developed plans for a couple of areas on the property belonging to my longest-standing and wonderfully enthusiastic clients, L. and A. on the North Shore. They have a lovely place on a rocky cliff overlooking Nahant Bay, and they enjoy making it even more beautiful and comfortable each year. They are both artists, and both appreciate art in two and three dimensions: L. gardens and sculpts; A. is a talented photographer.
L. and A. had asked me to figure out how to screen out views of two neighbors from their house, and to develop plans in the two areas that would work with the extensive mature plantings already in place. I drew up plans that would bring a few new plants in, as well as reuse a number of plants already onsite. L. and A. liked the ideas, and we scheduled a date to move ahead.
Leahy Landscaping of Lynn carried out the work of digging and moving the plants; the crew, led by Anibal Marita, was excellent. At my request, and under the supervision of Marc Bolcome, Leahy’s arborist, they used a compressed-air tool on the project; we were working in a heavily planted area and I wanted to disturb or lose as few roots as possible.
The plan: Remove a 32′ long, 7′ high holly (Ilex ‘China Girl’) hedge from the edge of a residential drive court, reusing some of the plants for screening at the front property line, and install a collection of transplanted shrubs, a new Japanese maple, and some low Green Wave yews where the holly had been. Transplant most of the hollies to provide a 22′ long screen at the front property line, and use the rest at another location onsite.
Proposed methods: Hand-dig the holly. To avoid further stressing the three aging red pines under which some of the hollies were to be transplanted, excavate the transplant site with an air tool. Hand-dig the rest of the plants.
Actual methods: Hand-dug the holly, then blew out the root balls to loosen the nursery soil at their cores. Discovered that the wire baskets had not been removed at the original planting, removed those, and loosened the remaining soil, leaving roots intact. Removing the soil allowed the plants to fit in shallower-depth holes, which was helpful on a site with a lot of existing tree roots and drainage pipes. Removing the wire baskets will allow the hollies’ roots (and crowns) to grow unimpeded in their new locations.
Excavated under the pines with the air tool, and removed existing shrubs there also with the air tool, leaving all roots, including masses of feeder roots, intact.
Unwrapped the Japanese maple root ball, removed the wire basket and burlap, and removed/loosened the soil with the air tool.

Removing a girdling root from the Japanese maple. Note the root-ball soil line, four inches up the tree's trunk from the base of the trunk flare.
With a mini-claw mattock, pulled soil away from the trunk flare; soil had been piled 4″ up the trunk, concealing a girdling root and the flare itself. Marc Bolcome chiseled away the girdling root and made sure the flare was correctly exposed before laborers backfilled and watered in the root ball.
Removed the red clay soil encasing the nursery root ball of a rhododendron that had been planted onsite several years ago, but that had struggled for those years.

Breaking up the clay soil in the root ball of a rhododendron that had been planted under these pines a few years back.
With the concrete-like soil mostly gone, the plant should finally have a chance to spend its energy growing, rather than trying to break through that clay cast.
Cleared ground cover by hand in front of a row of mature Taxus trees,

Holes for holly transplants were dug by air tool, to minimize disturbance to the roots of the treeform yew hedge behind the plywood.
then excavated transplant holes with the air tool — again, to keep from disturbing roots of the existing yews — and transplanted more of the holly here.
The original plan, which also included the planting of six large clump bamboos and the moving of several broadleaf evergreen and herbaceous plants, was scheduled to take perhaps two days.
The hollies changed everything, though. They were enormous: planted eight or nine years ago at 3′ on center, they opened out to seven to eight feet in width.

One holly, trussed for moving. Ten of these plants had been placed on 3' centers to make a hedge; when freed from the hedge, each one opened out to cover at least seven feet in breadth.
There was no way we could fit them all where we had intended; they would have taken up more than seventy feet if we had placed them side by side!

Hand-dug holly that has been bare-rooted being prepared for transplant. Notice the clumps of hard, heavy soil from its original root ball lying around it; the wire basket is lying off to the left.

The trussed holly, now untied and moved to the planting bed, is at the back right of the photo. Liberated from the crush of a too-tight hedge planting, it has opened out to cover almost nine feet of fence.
It took a while to figure out where to put them, and then more time preparing those new locations to receive them. We ended up placing them — ten from the hedge, plus a shorter male plant — at various points around the property’s edge, where they do a magnificent job of screening out the neighbors.
We also used the air tool to excavate under some mature and very stressed red pines. Removing the pines wasn’t an option, so to minimize any added stress, we blew out a planting trench between the pine trunks and the fence, exposing but not disturbing the pines’ roots. We roughed up the bamboo roots, taken from their five- and seven-gallon pots, and set them in the trench before backfilling and watering the area.
All told, accomplishing the work took a full three days.
Lessons learned:
1. An compressed-air tool is a great tool for any kind of planting work. We tested its capabilities, and found it invaluable for working under trees, for bare-rooting new plants, for excavating existing shrubs, and for removing that dreadful red clay soil from the 4′ rhododendron. We used it to investigate suspicious root issues — that concrete-like slug encasing the rhody’s root mass, the hollies’ wire baskets, the Japanese maple’s buried root flare and girdling root — and when it wasn’t being used on the transplanting operation, we used it to give a little breathing room to the root flare of a river birch planted on site a few years ago.
On this particular site, which has been intensively gardened for decades, the soil is beautifully dark and rock-free. The air tool had no difficulty blowing it out of planting holes. Even with a rockier soil, an air tool has enough pressure (90 psig in this case) that bare-rooting shrubs takes a relatively short time. A laborer team can generally dig a 4-5′ broadleaf evergreen shrub in minutes. An air tool can do it as quickly or in a few more minutes, depending on soil type — but the amount of root mass saved makes the air tool by far the preferred method, horticulturally.
2. Plywood screens work beautifully to confine the overspray of soil from the spading site. For bare-rooting the already-dug hollies, the landscapers figured out that they could lift each plant into the back of their high-sided truck and spade off the root soil there, which kept the soil contained and the site clean.
3. At a minimum, workers using the air tool or helping with the bare-rooting should wear goggles and a face mask; very fine particles of soil spray everywhere at high pressure, and eyes and lungs should be protected. In rocky or sandy soil, the hazard is greater, and long sleeves and protective visored helmets are a good idea. The compressor is loud, too — ear protection should be used as well.
4. Never plant China Girl hollies that close together. They have a lush and luxuriant round form, and are determined to grow to that form (shrubs will push to grow into their particular habits — with some, you can push back by hedging them, but it makes sense to pick a variety whose natural habit lends itself to hedge form). Ten hollies had been planted at 3\’ o.c. to make a hedge; when removed from hedge configuration, the plants spread to between seven and nine feet in breadth. These plants now make a contribution to the landscape that they couldn’t in hedge form. L. couldn’t remember if the original plan, done by another LA, had called for China Girls or for some other holly, and wondered if the contractor might have substituted China Girls for something else. We’ll never know — but we’ll know what to avoid in future.
5. It made a ton of sense to excavate the bamboo’s planting trench with compressed air; with air, the pines’ roots remained intact and we could spread the bamboo roots out easily within the broader rooting area we had exposed.
Conclusion: The planting techniques were first-rate, the plants looked happy, the place looked great. L. and A. are delighted with the results (I know I’ve succeeded when I’ve pleased their artists’ eyes), and Leahy is moving on to do other air tool projects, knowing how well the technique works in a number of different situations. Now we’ll all be watching to see how everything grows; I’m betting they will all thrive.
Company: Leahy Landscaping of Lynn, MA
Leahy Project Manager: Aisha Lord
Leahy Arborist: Marc Bolcome, MCA
Leahy Foreman: Anibal Marita