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Gophers eat roots and tubers
It's either tubers or rhizomes. Tubers have starch filled roots, like potatoes, which I guess you can call tube shaped. Or you mean rhizomes, tubular roots that result in another, cloned, plant. Like the raspberry bush in my garden that has sent out roots to grow another plant right in the middle of our lawn...
Yes, although the majority of their diet is roots and tubers. Other things that they eat include grasses, herbs, eggs, carrion, insects, and lizards.
They would be similar, as the cell is dividing through the process of mitosis.
george bush
a sewer, trash,or bush
32"
deep
An azalea bush can be moved by digging a very large hole around the bush and easing the roots loose keeping a lot of dirt on the roots. Do this in the spring or fall when there are no harsh temperatures.
Gophers eat roots and tubers
yes you can but you have to get all the roots out with out riping any roots.
Move it.
How much bush, could a bush trimmer trim. If a bush trimmer could trim bush..? Hmm?
It is possible to move a snowball bush if it is getting to large for its place. This involves pulling the bush up from its roots and moving it to well-drained soil.
If it is a Japanese acer then it is unhappy. It is either suffering from draught or is either too wet or too dry at the roots. Close examination will tell you which.
Make sure the roots are receiving plenty of moisture . It may be rainy but the foliage may be preventing the rain reaching the roots. The bush is only two years old so the roots may not be beyond the canopy.
It is adapted because it uses it's deep roots to find water.