Jdman2840,
You have a woods? If so I would just plant it there and forget about the yard.
If you want to grow a few transplanted roots here is what I have done successfully.
On a small scale, if you do want to enjoy a few plants in your shaded plant bed around the house like I have done have a try at this. Go to the closest supplier of mulch, soil etc. Here is an easy mix to make in a Wheelbarrow.
One 2 cubic ft bag pine mulch finely chopped size, 1 bag coarse play sand, 1 bag potting soil. Get some dried maple leaves this fall and grind them up or better yet go to the woods and bag up some decomposed leaf litter and bring back to your Wheelbarrow.
This leaf litter is full of beneficial organisms that are good for ginseng. So the more the better.
Mix it all up and when you dig a hole in your poor quality soil add a half bucket of this stuff to mix with your soil in the hole.
So basically you are planting roots in ground containers that you made when you dig the oversized holes.
Lots of work but you will get some nice looking ginseng growing around your house in shaded planting beds.
Most likely the roots will not be of good quality when planting this method, but if you want to enjoy seeing ginseng around your house this works.
Good luck,
Latt
PS
If you are transplanting wild ginseng roots from the forest then cancel everything i said above and do this. Dig up as much soil in the area you dug the wild ginseng in. Bring that dirt home in a couple buckets and put it in the holes. Place your root so the growth bud is the same depth it was when you dug it.
Also make sure the wild root is laid out nicely and not cramped in the hole.
Then water it in after transplanting and cover it with leaf litter of mulch. Most likely you will have nice wild ginseng growing in your
mulch bed the following May.
You can take any seed they make and plant them back into the woods.
Good luck Latt