Xtremehorticulture

Not Enough Bees for Pollination?

Q. I think I don’t have enough bees to pollinate my vegetables. What should I do? Honeybee pollinating peach flower. A. To improve vegetable pollination, plant herbs in the garden or in containers such as rosemary, dill, lavender and tarragon to attract bees. Herbs that flower during the winter like rosemary are a good choice for cool season crops. Other herbs that flower in the summer keep pollinators coming back.             Water also attracts pollinators in the summer so put out a shallow tray of water with some rocks in it and clean the tray and water once a week.             Remember pollination will be erratic in the garden anytime temperatures climb above 90° F. Its not because the pollinators like honeybees are not active. They are. Many are busy during summer heat hauling water back to the hive to keep it cool. Once temperatures exceed 105° F,  few plants get pollinated during that kind of heat because of “pollen failure”. Successful pollination occurs again when the air temperatures start dropping in the late summer and early fall and pollen tubes and sperm can succeed in pollination.

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Palm Container Problem

Q. We are next to Santa Cruz, Ca. A skilled gardener friend of ours suggested one could support the palm, dig a hole below it, and drop it down the necessary foot or so. I haven’t explored the extent of the rooting, but I may attempt that if it doesn’t have any depth to it. A.  Is that a broken container around the base of the plant? It looks like the palm was in a container and rooted into the soil beneath it. Then broke the clay container as it got larger and the owners let it root. Queen palm? I am used to the Mojave Desert so that is my focus. It looks like queen palm. Problem What worries me is how constricted the trunk is from being in that container. I am not sure how weak the trunk is from that constriction and how strong it will be in the future as the top gets heavier.  Solution To be on the safe side I would get rid of it or, if you want to be daring…try burying the trunk as you replant it so the constriction is below ground and hopefully the trunk will send out new roots from that area. That does work in some palms as long as you don’t keep the soil around the trunk too wet. Otherwise it looks like its in good health. I would be concerned what kind of liability this tree might have on other people who visit, property or neighbors. Good luck! https://www.hunker.com/13428846/what-is-the-root-base-of-a-queen-palm-tree https://www.researchgate.net/publication/242586654_Palm_root_growth_and_implications_for_transplanting  

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Japanese Blueberries and Yew Problems in the Desert

Q. About one month ago my landscaper recommended watering six days a week for 20 minutes because he thought one of our Japanese blueberries and Podocarpus (Japanese Yew or Yew pine) were not getting enough water. They were planted about six months ago during the winter months when it was cool and now they are not looking healthy. A. If you follow me here or on my blog you know I’m not a big fan of planting Japanese blueberries in our desert climate and soils. Maybe one or two as specimens but not a bunch in a straight line and used for privacy. I don’t like Yew pine either for similar reasons, but I seldom get questions about yew pine. I get more complaints about Japanese blueberry failing in home landscapes than any other plant except maybe bottle tree. Wrong Exposure             People buy both Japanese blueberry and yew and put them in the wrong places in a landscape, fail to amend the soil properly at planting and surround them with rock. Someone is doing a good job selling them as privacy hedges near a wall. That’s a mistake in my opinion and I wish it would stop. Watering             I am assuming you are watering these plants three or four times a week and your landscaper is suggesting watering daily. Watering three or four times a week will be enough water for these plants during the summer if they receive enough water each time. Daily watering any types of trees and shrubs is a mistake. That’s not an opinion. That’s a fact. Don’t go there if you don’t have to. Your plants may not be any better off after this change if they were planted in the wrong place at the start.             I suspect that both types of plants were planted in the wrong location in the landscape. Both plants like shade in the afternoon when temperatures are above 100° F. They struggle if planted in full sun in our desert climate. They will look bad during the hot summer months when planted near hot walls. Remember this when you are evaluating your plants. Amend Soils             Both plants prefer highly amended soils at the time of planting. They are not true desert plants, so they will require extra TLC. If these plants are surrounded by rock they will begin to struggle in 3 to 5 years. If you do plant them, make sure the soil is amended with a good quality compost at planting and surround them with 4 inches of woodchips on the soil surface rather than rock. What to do?  Rather than increase your irrigation to daily, increase the number of emitters or size of emitters around those plants. Increase the amount of water delivered to them so that it wets the soil to at least 18 inches deep. This can be done without increasing the minutes needed. The soil should be wet out to the dripline of the plant. Irrigate them deeply 3 to 4 times a week, not shallow irrigations daily. The only plants in a landscape that require daily irrigations during the summer are lawns, raised beds and annual flowers.             If you think these plants should be moved to a different landscape location, replant them during the fall and winter months. Remove 1/3 of the tops after they are moved. You can successfully move plants that were growing up to two or even three years in the ground if done correctly.

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August 19 Webinar: Coronavirus Food Assistance Program Additions

USDA to Host CFAP Producer Webinar August 19 to Discuss Newly Eligible Specialty Crops, Nursery Crops, Cut Flowers and more The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will host a webinar on August 19 at 3 p.m. ET to discuss recently added commodities eligible for the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP). Join the USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) for detailed examples on specialty crops, nursery crops, cut flowers, eligible aquaculture and more. USDA has extended the deadline and is accepting applications for CFAP through September 11. Visit the Website and Register

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Remove Mesquite While its Young and Replace it With Something Smarter

Q. A couple years ago our builder planted a multi-trunk Chilean Mesquite tree in our side yard which borders a street. The tree is planted 12 feet from the house but is only 5 feet from a block wall. I am concerned this tree will become huge and its root system may disrupt the wall since there are several irrigated shrubs on the other side. I am thinking of removing it while it’s still young and replacing it with a “tamer” tree. A young mesquite tree in good landscape form and enough space to grow. It can get 50 feet tall with irrigation and fertilizer. A. That’s a good call and very forward thinking on your part. This tree will grow quickly to about 50 feet with an equal spread. If you are going to replace a tree, this fall would be the right time to do it. Remember, planting smaller sized trees will overtake planting larger trees in one or two seasons of growth. No reason to buy larger trees unless you need immediate impact from them. Texas or Mexican olive (Cordia boissieri) with irrigation. A smaller tree for smaller areas than mesquite.             If your home is a single-story home, consider two small desert trees to replace a single big Chilean Mesquite. Plant them a distance apart equal to their mature height and about half their mature height from the home. If this tree area is on the south or west side of the home, make them winter deciduous for winter heat gain. All you want are trees large enough to shade the walls and windows during the summer. Little leaf cordia (Cordia parvifolia) as a very small street tree in Las Vegas. Another landscape tree much smaller than mesquite and native. Use two of these small trees instead of one mesquite for shading exterior walls.             Tree roots follow the water. Roots will grow wherever you apply water, or they find wet soil. Keep applied water 3 foot from the foundation of the home and the wall. It might not be a bad idea to install a root barrier between the trees and the home’s foundation and block wall. But watering lengthwise and parallel to the home will encourage the roots of the newly planted trees to grow in that direction as well. Tree roots do not have to grow in a circle under the tree.

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Cicada Damage to Ash Trees May Be Confusing

Q.  Several years back my father and I planted two Raywood ash trees in each of our yards. Now both of trees have longitudinal gashes along the stems that kill many of the smaller branches. Last year I  found the same problem on one of my rose bushes. Per the recommendation of the nursery I sprayed a systemic containing imidacloprid and clothianidin on the trees. My picture showing cicada damage to small stems on Acacia. A.  This sounds like egg laying damage by the Apache cicada; those high-pitched insects you hear buzzing in about July. The insecticide you are spraying will not correct this problem so stop using it. This female cicada is not laying eggs…yet..             Apache cicadas make that buzzing noise so they can mate. Once they have mated, the female lays eggs in a slit she creates on the branches. If these slits cause enough damage, the twig dies. The eggs then hatch, and the insect drops to the ground where they burrow into the soil and feed on plant roots. Lots of different trees are favorites, your ash trees (sounds like the roses, too) being among them. Cicada empty skin or exoskeleton left behind on anything they can find when they emerge from the ground.             Spraying the tree with an insecticide, or drenching the soil with one, is not a good idea. I think your best bet is to give your trees as much chance to heal themselves, after the damage is done, as possible. Their best chance of healing from this type of damage is the presence of fertilizer in the soil and adequate water during the heat. Of course, scaring these insects off to other trees during mating time would help.             Make sure these trees are fertilized in the spring and bump up the amount of water applied when you start hearing the buzzing noise. You might even try watering every other day during this period to help the tree recover from cicada egg laying damage.

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One Stem of Pomegranate Not Green

Q. One of my pomegranate trees has very pale leaves on one of its branches and dark healthy green leaves on the others.  I put nitrogen fertilizer on both sides of the tree plus we did put a balanced fertilizer on it and some compost. Pomegranate with one stem off color. What to do? Read on. A. When one branch of a plant is dramatically different in color while the other branches are healthy, it means that whatever is causing this problem is at the bottom of that sick part. Since borers are not common in pomegranate the cause is most likely manmade or a disease problem.             Look at the main stem just below the yellow leaves. The leaves below this point should be healthy while the leaves above it should be sickly. If the entire stem is sick, then look at the stem just above and below where it enters the ground.             If the entire stem is sick but alive then I am guessing it is damage below this area from tools, machinery, or disease. If the stem is totally dead then it involves a lot more guesswork. Mower damage, if planted in a lawn, can cause this type of damage. This type of damage makes the plant worse during hot summer months when everything is more stressed. Line trimmer damage can cause the same type of damage as mowers. Diseases like “collar rot” that “choke” the stem, when the plant is kept moist all the time, can cause the same visual damage as mowers and line trimmers.             What to do? If there is mulch surrounding the stems or anything that can act like a sponge and hold water, pull it back and away from the stems 6 to 12 inches and let this area dry out.             Never water daily. Always give the soil a chance to “dry out” before watering again. The only areas of a landscape that need daily watering are lawns, vegetable gardens and flower beds.             Whatever the cause, this yellowing stem probably should be removed. Sanitize your lopper, pruning shears or saw with alcohol and remove the stem at ground level. It is best to do it in the fall or winter, but you can remove it now on pomegranates with no problems.

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Heatmaster Tomato: Heat tolerant for Desert Gardens

Q. I found a tomato variety that’s doing great in my garden called Heatmaster. I can tell it’s a determinate type because it’s loaded with tomatoes right now, pretty much all at the same time. I’ve read determinate types die after the tomatoes ripen. Is that true? Can I root it from a branch and plant it next month for a second crop even though it’s a determinate type? A. Yes, Heatmaster is a determinate type regarding how the plant grows and produces tomatoes. But be careful. You can root this tomato from suckers but creating new plants from suckers is difficult to do in this climate. Try it and see how you do but it can be done.             Determinateand indeterminate tomatoes have their pluses and minuses. (FYI…there are indeterminate Bush tomatoes.) You can usually tell if its determinate from where the fruit is produced. Determinate tomatoes produce their fruit at the ends of stems while indeterminate types typically produce along its stems. Most of what I heard about heat tolerant tomatoes like Heatmaster is regarding their taste.             Determinate types of tomatoes usually do not die after they set fruit. Tomato plants are tropical perennials. Death is typically from disease or problems associated with high temperatures. A determinate type tomato is good to have in the garden, but indeterminate types work as well. Just handle them differently.             So-called heat tolerant tomatoes like Heatmaster, Phoenix (also determinate) and others were bred for warm southern climates and not for the hot desert. They might set fruit at temperatures a few degrees warmer than normal but not when the air temperature gets into the 100s we sometimes see. Collection of tomatoes grown in Las Vegas in 2005 including Sweet 100 Cherry tomato, Snow White cherry tomato, yellow pear, Ivory Egg heirloom and Black from Tula heirloom.          If you have cool weather during fruit set then any tomato will set fruit including heirlooms like Mortgage Lifter and Brandywines. That’s why you may have good luck with hard-to-set tomatoes some years. Some of it is the “luck of the draw” as far as weather goes but a favorable garden environment that limits wind and wide temperature swings helps. Be careful about relying on one year of good production to make future buying decisions.             Plant several types of tomatoes rather than focus on one variety. Cherry, grape and pear tomatoes are the easiest to grow and set fruit the easiest. Most of these are indeterminate types. Probably the next easiest are the plum type tomatoes like San Marzano and Roma. For some reason disease prone Early Girl (indeterminate), hybrid Celebrity (bushy but indeterminate) and even Burpee’s 70-year-old Big Boy (indeterminate) are good performers in our finicky desert climate.             Make sure there aren’t other reasons for a lack of fruit set such as low humidity and a lack of pollinators. Plant herbs to attract pollinators like rosemary, basil, thyme, mint, and fennel. Put out water in flat trays and clean it often. Bees visit many of the flowering herbs and clean water they can haul back to their hives when tomatoes start flowering.

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Black Streak on Mesquite Tree

Q. I have a 30-foot tall Chilean Mesquite tree that looks nice and healthy but has a 2-foot long dry black streak on its trunk. What is it and what’s the problem? Black discoloration of mesquite trunk from my pictures A. These dark streaks on the trunk are a common occurrence on mesquite, particularly if it had been pruned in the past. In common vernacular, the tree “bled” after it was pruned. If your tree otherwise looks healthy, then there is nothing to worry about. Wetwood aka Slime Flux               Mesquite gets a minor bacterial disease problem called wetwood, a.k.a. “slime flux”, which causes a similar staining on large limbs and the trunk. But the black stain is constantly wet and “smelly”. Slime flux is a bacterial infection deep inside the tree which causes a wet “yeasty” oozing to flow from limbs that attracts flies. It’s spread from tree to tree by lots of things including “tree trimmers” that think they are arborists. It’s not a lethal disease problem for the tree, but it may cause owners some angst. Slime flux bacterial disease on African sumac.             I have a picture of a mesquite tree with a black streak on its trunk on my blog. I will repost it for you to look at and compare.

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Frasers Photinia vs Red Tip Photinia

Q. What is the difference between “Red Tip Photinia” and “Fraser’s Photinia”? Red Tip or Frasers Photinia A. My understanding is that they are the same plant, just different common names. The Latin name has both Photinia and Fraser (fraseri) in it. This explains why it is sometimes called Fraser’s Photinia. Because it’s new spring growth  is red, it is sometimes called Red Tip, or Red Tipped Photinia. I prefer the name “Red Tip Photinia” because it describes the plant better than calling it “Fraser’s Photinia” or just “Red Tip”.             When in doubt about the plant go back to the Latin name to see if it’s the same plant. Plants can have several different common names but only one agreed upon Latin name.             By the way, this plant is considered “mesic” (needs to be watered more often than “xeric” plants), grows better in amended soil and doesn’t like to grow in hot spots or surrounded by rock.

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