miker
Chumono
Well, after a fairly long, cold winter (only my second keeping trees here in PA), I have had a number of trees either not wake up at all, or start to leaf out weakly, then die. I have also had a few that are just leafing out weakly and I am not entirely sure what could have happened.
I wintered my trees on a porch area near the house on a brick surface right on the ground, except for the conifers, which sat elevated on a table in the same area. The only ones I protected are the tridents and a redwood and sequioa and these are alive and well. The rest were on their own.
The losses I have identified so far:
Gingko- never woke up and is just a dead stick
Japanese beech- never woke up and the elongated buds were rotted when checked
American beach sapling-never woke up
American hornbeam sapling from Florida, never woke up
Stewartia monadelphia-buds opened but are not developing into full leaves
Acer saccharum-locally sourced sapling, leafed out very weakly(other from same source leafed out fine)
Southern sugar maple-only one small branch has a couple buds starting to open very weakly, rest of tree may be dead
Englemann's spruce, this weakened tree (my fault) died in March, last bit of foliage turned brown
Oriental spruce- the rest of the foliage died after the top died back last year, also my fault
Pinus parviflora, Koto Hime, turned yellow, then all needles died in the last couple months, buds never opened
Pinus parviflora, Arakawa, same as the Koto Hime, dead
There may be others to add to the list, but the above is what I can think of so far.
As for the culprit(s) responsible for the loss of my deciduous trees, I am not sure. Our lowest winter temperature was -2- -3ish F, and I know nothing dried out over the dormancy period. Perhaps the roots on many froze and were killed leading to the deaths in some and the weakness seen in other trees? Maybe everything stayed too wet and a lot of the trees just rotted? Does anyone have any thoughts?
I wintered my trees on a porch area near the house on a brick surface right on the ground, except for the conifers, which sat elevated on a table in the same area. The only ones I protected are the tridents and a redwood and sequioa and these are alive and well. The rest were on their own.
The losses I have identified so far:
Gingko- never woke up and is just a dead stick
Japanese beech- never woke up and the elongated buds were rotted when checked
American beach sapling-never woke up
American hornbeam sapling from Florida, never woke up
Stewartia monadelphia-buds opened but are not developing into full leaves
Acer saccharum-locally sourced sapling, leafed out very weakly(other from same source leafed out fine)
Southern sugar maple-only one small branch has a couple buds starting to open very weakly, rest of tree may be dead
Englemann's spruce, this weakened tree (my fault) died in March, last bit of foliage turned brown
Oriental spruce- the rest of the foliage died after the top died back last year, also my fault
Pinus parviflora, Koto Hime, turned yellow, then all needles died in the last couple months, buds never opened
Pinus parviflora, Arakawa, same as the Koto Hime, dead
There may be others to add to the list, but the above is what I can think of so far.
As for the culprit(s) responsible for the loss of my deciduous trees, I am not sure. Our lowest winter temperature was -2- -3ish F, and I know nothing dried out over the dormancy period. Perhaps the roots on many froze and were killed leading to the deaths in some and the weakness seen in other trees? Maybe everything stayed too wet and a lot of the trees just rotted? Does anyone have any thoughts?