Xtremehorticulture

Systemic Insecticides Applied to Fruit Trees Does Not Make Sense to Me

I am very concerned about an insecticide I applied to my lemon and pomegranate tree…. Q. Your newspaper column really caught my eye and I am very concerned about the coming fruit on my Meyer lemon and pomegranate tree. I was having a problem with something eating my lemon and went to nursery to purchase the dormant oil to ward off insects. The nurseryman told me I was too late to apply it and must apply Bayers Advanced Insect Control at this time of the year.  So the same day, February 25, 2012, I applied 1 oz. to the lemon tree and 2 oz. to the pomegranate tree. I believe this is a systemic insect control as it is only applied once a year and the nursery man had said it goes up through the stems.  I am very upset as it appears we will have a good crop of lemons this year as well as pomegranates and I will be afraid to eat any. These are both young trees.   A. This particular insecticide is a soil applied conventional, systemic insecticide. Systemic means that the plant can take up this insecticide, transport it through the trunk and limbs to branches where it provides protection from insect attacks. It is labeled as an application for controlling insects on FRUIT BEARING fruit trees. The federal government has approved its use for these purposes.  Now for my opinion. I would never use a systemic insecticide of plants that produce food regardless of who or what approved it. This, to me, just does not make any sense at all. Personally I would not knowingly eat fruit produced from trees  that have been treated with this type of a product. Use on landscape or ornamental trees is a different situation.

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No Flowers on Peach Tree Could be Due to Overzealous Winter Pruning

Q. Of my 5 peach trees only two blossomed thus far, the other 3 have started or well on their way to leaf out.  I presume I’ll not get peaches from them this year.  Any idea why they would leaf out and not blossom? A. My guess is that you may have over pruned your peach tree. If you prune off all of last years growth, you eliminated your flowers and fruit. On three of your trees you removed this growth. On two you did not. Those two are flowering. The other three cannot flower because the flowering wood was pruned off. You did not tell me how old the trees were. I assume they are fairly young. Peaches flower laterally along last years growth. This growth is typicially reddish brown. Peaches flower laterally (along the sides) of last years growth. Last years growth is usually much brighter red than wood which is older. My hand shows you both types of growth. The reddish growth above my middle finger is last years wood. You can also see this growth starting just under my thumb and also below the bottom of my hand. Look at the buds along this wood. Along the length of this reddish growth you see multiple buds in the same spot. These are called collateral buds. In peach, pointed lateral buds are usually leaf buds. Fatter, rounder lateral buds are usually flower buds. Typically peach trees blossom before there is much leaf growth. If blossoms never appeared and these trees are not young trees then the wood supporting the flowers were either pruned out this winter or the flower buds suffered from cold damage and died.              Peach trees can flower at a fairly young age so I would think you would see at least a few flowers if they were very young and no pruned out.             If they flower but do not set fruit this can be due to a late freeze. Most peaches are self-fertile and do not require a pollinator.

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Come Chat With Me!

I will be at Viragrow every Monday and Friday through March for those who want to chat with me about current horticulture problems. Or bring in your own horticulture discovery and work with me to find a solution. Viragrow is commitment to successful southern Nevada horticulture and I appreciate this community support. Come in any Monday or Friday, 9 to 3, during March. [email protected] Sponsored by Viragrow, Inc. Viragrow, Inc. 1100 East Dehli St. North Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (702) 399 3868

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Aphids on the Loose in Your Landscape and Garden

Aphids overwinter on all sorts of plants in your yard and attacking plants primarily in the spring. As soon as temperatures warm up these “mother” aphids start looking for places to feed and populate. They don’t need a mate to do this. They can just give birth to living young directly and bypass the mating rituals. If you look close on newly emerging “soft” tissue of plants you will most likely find them. Ladybird beetles (ladybugs) and green lacewings help but in sufficient numbers they can get out of control. Aphids have populated this soft, succulent flower stalk of red yucca. The adult was probably overwintering in the leaf crevices of the plant, When the flower stalk emerged she began feeding and giving birth. This is red yucca with an emerging flower stalk, taken about a week ago. If the mother aphid overwinters out of the cold in the leaf crevices this insect can “catch a ride” on this emerging plant part where tissue is soft and succulent. From there it is much easier feeding than on those tough old leathery leaves. Aphid mother and young Leaf curling on plum and aphids feeding along the new, soft stem growth. Aphids feeding and reproducing on young pomegranate fruit. Aphids feeding and reproducing on rose flower buds. Insecticidal soaps work very well on aphids. No reason for hard pesticides. It may take a few applications but you will reduce their numbers significantly. Control ants too. They tend to move them about on different plant parts. Spray the undersides of leaves as well as the tops.

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What Todo To Vegetables March and April

This is what we will do with vegetables during these months. Look for tomato hornworms to be active in April. They attack grapes as well as tomatoes. The adults, the sphinx moth, has been flying now for two weeks and laying her eggs which turn into the hornworm. Found this sphinx moth lying on the sidewalk during a walk. This was two weeks ago. They are flying so horn worms will be a problem soon. Below is a hornworm, the larva of the above moth. I got this picture from the internet since I dont have a good pic. Sorry to whoever’s this was. I don’t have the reference anymore. New transplants, protect from cutworms with Bt or spinosad. Spinosad is harder on bees but gets more different types of insects. More information on spinosad. Bt comes as Dipel or Thuricide. Spray on leaves and will leave a residual for a few days after you spray and then it is gone. Respray weekly for the next four weeks. The insect has to “eat” leaves that have the Bt on it. More information on Bt. They are both “organic”.  Fertilize with a high nitrogen fertilizer once a month. This can be blood meal or a conventional nitrogen fertilizer such as ammonium sulfate (21-0-0). Aphids are out. They overwintered on your other plants and weeds in the yard. They are easy to control with insectidal soap, Neem or other products. But they will be on the UNDERSIDES of the leaves so make sure you spray on the undersides of leaves, not just the tops. Direct the spray up under the foliage when you spray.

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Using Limb Spreaders in Fruit Trees

Plums, European pears and Asian pears have a tendency to grow vertically upright and narrow. If caught early enough, young limbs can be trained to grow less vertically and into the more desirable 45 degree angle… Plums, European pears and Asian pears have a tendency to grow vertically upright and narrow. Upright or vertical growth tends to be faster growing and produce less fruit. If caught early enough, young limbs can be trained to grow less vertically and into the more desirable 45 degree angle which provides a better balance between leaf and shoot growth and fruit production. One way to do this is the use of limb spreaders. Wooden limb spreaders for spreading fruit tree limbs into a more desirable 45 degree angle. Limb spreaders can be placed between a narrow limb and the trunk so that the limb is “pushed” and trained to grow in a less vertical position. The angle we would like to achieve is about a 45 degree angle from horizontal but should be done to smaller diameter stems when the sap is “flowing”. The so-called flowing of sap is when the trees exhibit growth. At this time the branches are more supple and can be bent more easily without breakage. Pounding a nail into the V of the limb spreader and then cutting off its head is a way to give your limb spreaders more “bite” when holding the limbs apart. I don’t like to do this unless I really have to. It can damage the limb.  Limbs that are three years old and less can be bent into more horizontal growth through the use of limb spreaders. Occasionally older branches can also be forced.  Use limb spreaders to push branches that are too vertical into a more horizontal habit. Limb spreaders are usually made from 1 x 2 inch wood stock or wood lathe.  This stock is cut into the lengths that are needed, notched on both ends, with finishing nails driven in to the center of the notch.  The heads of the finishing nails are then cut off.  The finishing nails help prevent the spreader from slipping on the branch.   Limb spreaders can be made in different lengths to handle different spacings when needed. If you can’t find or don’t know how to make limb spreaders, we have them available in different sizes at the Orchard if you can’t find them or don’t wish to make them yourself.  All we are asking is a small donation toward the Orchard maintenance fund.

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Texas Ranger (Sage) Getting Woody

What should I do and when should I do it? Q. My Texas rangers have become very woody. Each have 2-2gph emitters and are watered for 40 min. 3 times each week. One is close to other plants and is probably stealing water from them. So, what should I do and when should I do it? A. Basically they have been pruned with a hedge shears or pruned like they were hedged. This has caused the outside of the canopy to become thin with lots of interior older wood. It will get progressively more like this with time and become more and more sparse unless the plants are allowed to get much larger. You have three options.             Let them get larger. This will allow them to put on sufficient new growth on the outside to cover up the sparseness of the foliage and the very old interior wood.             Second, you can do some corrective pruning. This may make them ugly for a couple of seasons but you will be on your way to re-establishing the plants with a better appearance and longer life. This would require two to three cuts deep inside the canopy, opening the canopy for new growth and re-establishing a new canopy. A caveat. I did not do this pruning but I saw it and it demonstrates an idea. The idea is the concept of renewal pruning. Renewal pruning is cutting back about 1/4 to 1/3 of the shrub every couple of years so that you have a “new” shrub every 6 to 10 years. This helps keep the shrub green from top to bottom and avoids it from getting woody at the base.             This will leave them looking like a gap-toothed 7 seven year old for a few months until they fill in. Next year remove two more and let it recover. By the third year you should have removed most of the older wood and the shrub should be well on its way to looking and performing better.             From that point forward you would renew prune the shrub every two or three years. This means that every two or three years you could take out maybe two of the oldest stems from the base and let it regrow out. That is all the pruning required on this plant. Another option is called rejuvenation pruning.This is basically cutting the shrub to within a couple of inches of the top of the soil or mulch and letting it regrow from these “stubs”. This does not work with all shrubs so make sure it works on the shrub you are thinking of doing it to before you do it. If you are not sure it will work on a specific shrub, cut one of the stems back to a couple of inches and watch what happens during the next growing season. Cutting shrubs down within a few inches of the soil or mulch surface is called rejuvenation pruning. Oleanders respond well to this type of pruning. Be careful though because not all shrubs will respond favorably to this drastic form of pruning.              Here is a shrub that was attacked by a hedge shears. Notice that there is sucker growth coming from the base. This is an excellent sign that this shrub is a candidate for either renewal or rejuvenation pruning.  Third is to pull them out and replace them and start pruning them the correct way which is without a hedge shears but two or three deep cuts every two to three years.

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Iris Not Blooming Any More

They bloomed for many years but the last two years they had no blooms. Is there anything I should be doing? Q. I planted several bulbs of iris in my yard about 7 years ago. They bloomed for many years but the last two years they had no blooms. Is there anything I should be doing?  I clean out all the dead leaves between bulbs and have removed a couple of bulbs. They are watered same as other plants according to the time of year for 25 minutes. A. The usual problem when iris is not blooming when they were when they were younger is not dividing them.             They must be dug up, the rhizomes severed, dusted with a fungicide and left to heal for a day or two in the shade, spaced appropriately and replanted. Throw out damaged or rhizomes that are too small unless you want to baby the small ones until they get enough size to bloom.             Distances apart depend on the size of the iris; smaller ones closer together and larger ones further apart. Taller ones toward the back and shorter ones near the front.             Replant them with compost and a starter fertilizer mixed in such as bone meal. Fertilize once a month lightly with a good quality flower fertilizer.             But overcrowding will cause them to stop blooming. They are in the same spot so I am figuring the light is the same unless some trees got bigger and limited sunlight to them.             For watering a large iris bed I would use low pressure, in-line drip emitters in half inch poly pipe such as Jain or Netafim brands preferably. Space the pipe about 12 inches apart parallel to each other throughout the bed. They can be laid on top of the soil, just under mulch.

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Is This Verticillium Wilt in My Olive Tree?

Do you think the sparse looking tree could have verticillium that you mentioned in your newsletter? Q. I need your help again. I have two Swan Hill olives trees in the back yard. One has lost a lot of leaves and looks sparse and the other looks good. I have also taken a couple pictures of of the problem tree. Do you think the sparse looking tree could have verticillium that you mentioned in your newsletter? A. The tree looks pretty young and I would not expect it this soon in its life if it appeared at all. This disease is not common here.             It is hard to really know if the disease is present or not just by looking at a tree. Olive has few problems.             It is by deduction. Verticillium wilt causes limb dieback in trees. My olive tree has limb dieback. Therefore my olive tree has Verticillium wilt. That’s how it is diagnosed now without sending a sample to a pathologist.             Typical Verticillium wilt symptoms do not occur in olive like they do in other trees. Upon close inspection of an infected limb, olive looks normal instead of having the vascular streaking common to that disease.             Two things you can do; watch it and see if it gets worse or send a sample to the state pathologist with the Nevada Department of Agriculture. This would be in Carson City. His contact information is on their website or call their local office at 702-486-4690.             I would not cut any limbs or remove them until you have some better idea of what is going on from a source that does not profit from tree removal. In the meantime, water it frequently and deeply. Fertilize it now for good growth.

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What is a Good Patio Container Fruit Tree?

Q. I live in a 3rd floor condo that faces south. I get about 7 hours of direct sun and have containers on my patio with spinach, tomatoes and peppers that are doing well so far. I was wondering if there are any types of fruit trees that produce and thrive in a patio container? A. Yes, there are. I worry a bit about the weight that this will place on your patio. Make sure it can handle this type of load before you attempt containers there.             There are light weight soil mixes that can be used to lessen the weight load on the patio. These mixes frequently use amendments like perlite that replace heavier components of the mix.             A good citrus to grow in containers in our climate is cumquat. It is tolerant of very low Cumquat fruit about 1 1/2 inch long temperatures, as far as citrus goes, and stays very small. Tender citrus to use would be limes and calamondin, sometimes called calamansi, but they will need protection from winter cold temperatures. Citrus espalier or some might call “trellis”             You can use any of the genetic dwarf fruit trees in containers. I would trellis the tree near an available wall. If you select a genetic dwarf fruit tree the container needs to be large. Citrus in an espalier             If your patio is protected from wind and cold you might consider kiwi, passionfruit, giant passionfruit or dragonfruit.

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