Yes, a willow tree can regrow from a stump through a process called coppicing, where new shoots sprout from the remaining stump.
Yes, a maple tree can regrow from a stump through a process called coppicing, where new shoots sprout from the remaining stump.
Yes you can grow a tree from a stump but it would take more or just exactly a decade.
willow tree
Mushrooms grow from a tree stump when spores, which are like seeds, land on the stump and find the right conditions to grow. The spores develop into mycelium, a network of tiny threads that break down the wood of the stump. Eventually, the mycelium forms a mushroom, which emerges from the stump to release more spores and start the cycle again.
no
the bottom of the tree is the stump and roots. also they grow on the soil
if you say tree stump i assume it's a tree you've cut down. Once a tree is cut down it can never grow again.
Cut it down or have it cut down. Remove the stump, repair the drains.
There are willow trees all over southern Canada.
No way!
By a pond or creek
Absolutely!Our maple (about 30 yrs old) was removed recently because it was the roots were pushing up the shed, but it was otherwise healthy...Unfortunately, we left the stump and it's continuing to put its energy into expanding it's root structure and lots of shoots...If you don't kill the stump, or remove/rot it out, you'll definitely get re-growth.(At least in my area were the climate is very favorable -- Southern British Columbia)