Xtremehorticulture

Pyracantha Does Not like Rock Mulch

Q. I have a hedge of pyracantha on the northeast corner of my property. It is 16 years old.  It grows underneath three large pine trees.  It does not get much sun. The soil, if you can call it that, is mostly just rocks. The plant is thinning and getting bare in the center. The top is still fairly green. The amount of berries in the winter has been decreasing. I dug around the roots as much as I could and amended the soil with Paydirt. I added about a cup of sulpher and some bone meal to the amended soil. I plan to add fertilizer in a couple of weeks. What more would you suggest?  By the way, there is very little yellow on the leaves. A. Pyracantha is in the Rose family and so it likes soils that are similar to fruit trees in the Rose family. This includes apples, pears, peaches, apricots and the like. It is also susceptible to some of the same problems as fruit trees in that family. It isn’t terribly fond of desert landscapes and rock mulch. Dwarf pyracantha in winter hedge sheared Without seeing it I am guessing it is a combination of light as you mentioned, lack of soil improvement, perhaps irrigation, maybe improper pruning and borer problems. Pyracantha needs a lot of sun but it is thin-barked so it sunburns easily if it’s canopy is open. Sunburn leads to borer problems. It is not a desert plant so it likes improved soils and wood mulches. It would like surface mulches made of wood that can decompose. Rock mulch will mineralize the soil over time and it does not like this. Pyracantha fruit in winter. Pyracantha or Firethorn is in the Rose family. Pruning is a little tricky but should result in shading any exposed trunk or major branches. From your description it sounds like it has been a hedge pruned; pruned with a hedge shears not pruners. It hedges nicely but I don’t recommend this unless you plant it as a hedge. As far as borers, you would see the trunk or major limbs with bark coming off and some darkened areas because of sunburn. Borers can be active for a couple of years and cause no obvious visual damage. There is an insecticide you can apply to the soil that gives the plant season-long control of borers if it is a problem. Pyracantha in bloom in the spring So what to do? Check the irrigation and make sure it’s getting enough water or increase the amount it gets. I would not increase how often but the amount it receives each time. Pull rocks away from the plant and put down 3 to 4 inches of compost and wood mulch. When pruning, be very careful you don’t open the canopy up too much which might allow sun burning the trunk and limbs. Fertilize once a year in the spring with a fertilizer formulated for flowering woody plants. You can substitute a rose fertilizer which will work. Apply a soil insecticide as soon as you start to see new growth. I hope this helps. For more information please visit the following http://xtremehorticulture.blogspot.com/2015/01/care-and-pruning-of-pyracantha-and.html http://xtremehorticulture.blogspot.com/2014/12/pyracantha-good-choice-for-moderate.html

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Care and Pruning of Pyracantha and Honeysuckle

Q. I am writing and enclosing photos of my pyracantha and honeysuckle. I cannot find info on the issue/treatment. A friend suggested I email you after reading the LVRJ column. A. Thanks for the pictures but they were not very helpful without more information. Let me tell you what I know about these plants and maybe that can help. Both of these plants grow well in our climate in a mixed, non-desert landscape. They are not desert adapted or desert plants so they will not perform well with rock mulch. Over time, they will perform better using wood mulch on the surface of the soil. They should be irrigated at the same time as other non-desert plants. They should be on an irrigation valve that provides water as frequently as other nondesert trees and shrubs. Most landscape plants require at least one fertilizer application each year in the spring or late winter. You can apply these spring fertilizers into March. Any general landscape, tree and shrub fertilizer will be good. Pyracantha occasionally develops yellowing due to iron chlorosis so an application of EDDHA iron chelate to the soil at the same time as the fertilizer would be advised. Apply both within a foot of drip emitters on top of the soil. The iron chelate needs to be covered with mulch. Pyracantha has a history of borer problems, particularly if it is planted in a southern or westerly exposure in rock mulch with lots of heat and intense sunlight. Borers can be active in the plants and the plant can still appear healthy for one or two seasons. After a season or two of borer attacks branches turn brown and begin to die back. They normally die back to where the borer damage while the rest of the undamaged plant below this remains green. Prune these dead branches out and let the plant regrow from these areas. Pictures from reader Because of the dead branches, the interior wood and trunk will receive intense sunlight. This intense sunlight increases the chance of sunburn to larger limbs and the trunk. This sunburn damage attracts boring insects (borers) to those locations. Borer damage in purple leaf plum For this reason, shade from the canopy on the interior wood of the plant is extremely important. Many woody plants in the rose family, which includes Pyracantha, are subject to damage from intense sunlight due to their thin outer bark. Most of our fruit trees are also in the rose family and are subject to sun damage and borer problems. Pruning should be pruned to maintain a moderately dense canopy. A canopy which is not so open provides filtered sunlight to the interior of the plant and reduces sun damage. You don’t want it pitch black inside the canopy but you do want filtered light, not intense sunlight, for any length of time. Honeysuckle is a good vine to use here. However, it tends to get woody at the bottom as it gets older. This woodiness at the base can be managed by pruning it correctly. Woodiness at the base is promoted when the vine is pruned only at the top. Several years of pruning the top results in an unattractive plant that is mostly wood without much foliage. When pruning this plant this winter, instead focus pruning efforts on the area close to the soil surface. Find large stems originating from this area and remove one third of this older wood close to the ground. This removes a lot of plant material from the vine but promotes new growth from the pruned stems. Limb dieback of peach due to borers These types of pruning cuts encourage new growth from the base of the plant. Next winter remove one third more at the same location and you should be back on track and reversing the aging of this plant, making it more juvenile. Focus your pruning efforts closer to the ground.

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Pyracantha Good Choice for Moderate Water Use Landscape

My only comments are that this can be fairly prone to borer problems if put into full, intense desert sunlight so that the sun damages its thin bark. There are definitely some varieties that birds like more (fruit) than others. Some varieties birds (Mockingbirds in particular) just won’t touch. There are some varieties where the fruit can be made into pyracantha jelly. Google it. Other varieties have no flavor at all or sweetness and hence birds don’t like them. Make sure you get pyracantha that have sweet berries if you want to fight with the birds over who gets them. Try them to see if they are sweet or not. The colloquial name “firethorn” refers to the stinging sensation you can get when the thorns puncture your skin. It is not poisonous. The fruit is closer to an apple anatomically (of course a very tiny apple) than a berry. It can get aphids, spider mites, iron chlorosis and cotton cushion scale. It is in the rose family so it is not a desert plant and does best with wood surface mulches. It will get root rot if the soil is kept too went or the soil does not drain easily.

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Ants Farming Aphids on Pyracantha

Q. We have a couple pyracantha bushes. We noticed this past summer some small, pen point sized, bright green bugs on the end of the branches. A day or two later I noticed ants in those same places but couldn’t tell if they were eating the bugs or not. Please advise if we need to do something.   Pyracantha, sometimes called firethorn,, with its red berries.Some have orange, yellow and off-red. A. From the sound of it the bush had aphids, sometimes called plant lice, but summer is not the usual time that aphids appear. Aphids normally appear with new growth in the spring and disappear when it gets hot.             Ants are attracted to aphids because the aphids release sugary honeydew when they’re feeding on the pyracantha leaves. Leaf cupping on plums due to aphid feeding in the spring.             Ants “farm” the aphids, take this honeydew excretion and use it. So you may see ants traveling up and down the pyracantha gathering and transporting honeydew to their nest in the soil. Ants may even move the aphids around to new locations to expand their “herd”.             It’s not a big problem if these are just aphids. The aphids will cause some stickiness on the leaves and may cause leaves to fall from the plant if the feeding becomes heavy. But that time of year I would not expect them to be a big problem. Ants herding aphids for their honeydew             If the problems is excessive the easiest thing to do is mix some soap and water, about as much as you would use when you would wash your dishes. Put it in a spray bottle and spray the soapy mixture directly on these green bugs, usually on the underside of the leaves.             You will probably have to do this every couple of days since soap and water does not leave any poisonous residue on the leaf surface and these spots will repopulate quickly after the spraying is done.             If you want more permanent control then you can use a traditional insecticide that has a label listing ornamental plants and aphid control. You can also treat the ant nest in the soil. Pouring boiling water on the ant hill will give some temporary organic control of the ants.

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Pyracantha Has No Berries

Q. Would you happen to know why my eight pyracantha bushes did not produce red berries this year?  I did not see birds helping themselves. A. On your pyracantha the only thing I can come up with is either that they did not flower (you did not tell me if they flowered or not) or that a late freeze eliminated the fruit crop. We did have a late freeze in the spring which eliminated many plums and apricots this past growing season.          Another possibility could be how they were pruned. If they were pruned in such a way that the flowering wood was removed, then it is possible the fruit would be removed as well. If your pyracantha bloomed this past year and did not fruit then this means it was most likely a late frost. I hope this helps.

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