It may be fine, sequoias have relatively shallow roots.
Sequoias absolutely do have deep roots, I promise. They aren’t particularly deeper than other species, part from them being utterly massive and requiring a similarly large, and yes, deep, root system to keep them from literally falling over. I’ve toured industrial tissue culture facilities which raise hundreds of thousands to millions of redwoods and sequoias per year. They use the deep cone-tainer pots, specifically and intentionally to allow for deeper rooting.
They don’t get there water from tap roots like other trees.
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Sequoias absolutely do have deep roots, I promise. They aren’t particularly deeper than other species, part from them being utterly massive and requiring a similarly large, and yes, deep, root system to keep them from literally falling over. I’ve toured industrial tissue culture facilities which raise hundreds of thousands to millions of redwoods and sequoias per year. They use the deep cone-tainer pots, specifically and intentionally to allow for deeper rooting.
Are you referring to the Sillets paper a couple years ago making the claim that redwoods do get some water from condensation on their leaves?
I love scientific clap backs, cracks me up every time.
Maybe not the most trusted ource but where I got it from https://www.giant-sequoia.com/faqs/giant-sequoia-questions/: