If after Tet many people bring peach trees and kumquat trees to sell, rent, or send them to bonsai gardens to take back to play Tet next year, up to 80% of families will throw away ornamental plants, because no have land to grow, no space for plants to grow, or simply want next year to have a fresher tree to play with.
With small peach branches, the disposal is to bring to a garbage truck, but with large and bulky peach branches, many people are afraid to know how to handle it. The tips below will help you avoid the headache of dealing with the "hard to get through" peach branches of your family.

Shake off the remaining flowers

Cut each branch into small pieces

Flower corpses after being shaken

Stems and flower bodies are neatly separated

Bundle into medium bundles and throw away. If you grow vegetables at home, you can bring large branches to the garden to make sticks for vegetable pots.

If the kumquat tree does not need to be used anymore, it will be treated similarly. You can dig the soil into separate bags, when carrying the pot, the kumquat will be less heavy.
By Family & Society