Xtremehorticulture

Sap Coming from Small Fruit Trees Usually Borers

Q. I have some newly planted peach and nectarine trees with sap coming from them. They don’t look healthy. Sap oozing from newly planted fruit trees nearly always borers. A. Borers are most likely the problem. On small, newly planted fruit trees it doesn’t take many borers to kill the trees. They usually “attack” the south or west sides of a trunk or the limb of a tree. That’s where there is sun damage. Painting these trunks and limbs with white latex paint lowers the surface temperature about 4 or 5 degrees. It may be enough in some cases. But shade is better. Borers will usually start to damage the hot side of a tree, either west or south.             The sun plays a role also. Direct sunlight on the trunk of a thin barked fruit tree can be a problem. The “smell” of sunburned and dying or dead limbs and trunks attracts female borers that are looking to lay their eggs, scientists believe. When limbs and trunks of newly planted fruit trees have sun damage, then borers are more likely to be found. This is a locust tree. Borers “smell” or find their way to the sun damaged areas of any tree. Here the top of the branches have been damaged by the sun. The bottom of branches out of sunlight are undamaged.             What to do?  Shade the young tree from Western and Southerly direct sunlight. Paint the trunk with diluted white latex paint. As a last ditch effort, drench the soil around the tree after it flowers (if possible) with a borer systemic insecticide and don’t eat the fruit for at least 12 months after the application. Which came first? Here sun damage eventually led to borer damage.

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Don’t Use Containers to Store Plants until You Move

Q. I’m new to Nevada and currently renting a house.  I’m looking for plants that can stay in containers for at least a year, as we plan to take them when and if we move. I tried to grow some herbs, an eggplant, cacti, flowering plants and they all died.   Strawberry’s and vegetables grown in containers at Viragrow A. If you are renting I would certainly encourage you to focus on annuals that you can use. I would not encourage you to buy fruit trees or landscape trees now and keep them in containers for planting later when you move. You are better off buying those plants when you are ready to put them in the ground. There is just much too high of a risk that you’ll lose them before you plant them. If you are fond of cooking and focus on some vegetables and herbs that you would be using for cooking. I would not use containers smaller than 5 gallon unless they are cacti are succulents. The small containers just do not hold enough water for these plants to make it through the summer months. Be prepared to water them daily. Use a good container soil when planting and avoid the cheapest soil you can buy. Fruit trees and landscape trees never do well stored for long periods of time in containers Most plants usually do better with an Eastern exposure rather than a southern or Western exposure. In the wintertime annual plants will frequently do better in the south and west exposures. Take a look at my blog and do some reading up on growing container plants here. Tricks to container gardening

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