Xtremehorticulture

‘Desert Museum’ Palo Verde Damaged by Wind

Q. I have a Desert Museum Palo Verde that was damaged during a windstorm. One of the branches blew off and damaged the trunk. It is an eyesore. Should I replace it? Palo verde is a rather soft tree particularly if you are in a hurry and want to grow it fast. Watering it like a mesic tree will speed its growth but could increase its potential for damage during strong winds. A. I would let the tree heal on its own but help it along its way. Healing takes two to three years if the tree is kept in good health. To do that, clean up the wound and apply management practices that encourage it to heal.  Sealing paints are a gimmick and don’t help the tree heal. In fact it can do just the opposite and prevent rapid healing. Don’t use any paint or “tree healer” as this was proven ineffective in past research and could actually slow the healing process. If you do paint the damaged area, use latex water-based paint. If there are any “splinters” resulting from the damage, remove them with a sanitized knife. Make the damage, and healthy areas surrounding it, as smooth as possible so the healing is faster and pleasant to look at. With that same knife remove the outer bark so that the edge is smooth and clean, and the damaged area is shaped like a vertical football. The damaged area will “compartmentalize” and the tree will “roll” over the area as it heals over the next couple of years. When the tree starts to grow this spring, make sure it gets adequate amounts of water and fertilizer. Good health practices help the tree to heal faster. To reattach or repair a limb split, or otherwise damaged area from a tree during a windstorm, is usually a lost cause. If done successfully the limb must be reattached, or repaired, within minutes or even seconds after it is severed or broken. Time is very important so that the damaged area doesn’t “dry out” before it is repaired.

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Palo Verde ‘Desert Museum’ Will Recover from Wind Damage

Q. I have a desert museum Palo Verde that was damaged during a windstorm. One of the branches blew off and damaged the trunk. It is an eyesore. Should I replace it? Replacing a tree because of damage is a personal call. The tree will repair itself from that kind of damage. It may take three or four years if you can live with that kind of damage for the next year or two. A. I would let the tree heal on its own but help it along its way. Healing takes two to three years if the tree is kept in good health. To do that, clean up the wound and apply management practices that encourage it to heal. Don’t use any paint or “tree healer” as this was proven ineffective in past research and could actually slow the healing process. If you do paint the damaged area, use latex water-based paint. If there are any “splinters” resulting from the damage, remove them with a sanitized knife. Make the damage, and healthy areas surrounding it, as smooth as possible so the healing is faster and pleasant to look at. Large tree wounds will heal if given time and you provide adequate water and fertilizer.  First they will compartmentalize their wounds and then start rolling in their cambium layer as it heals from site. With that same knife remove the outer bark so that the edge is smooth and clean, and the damaged area is shaped like a vertical football. The damaged area will “compartmentalize” and the tree will “roll” over the area as it heals over the next couple of years. When the tree starts to grow this spring, make sure it gets adequate amounts of water and fertilizer. Good health practices help the tree to heal faster. Early or late snowfall can damage trees with leaves still on them as this African sumac was damaged in Las Vegas. Repair of split limbs must be done very soon after the damage occurs or it won’t work. To reattach or repair a limb split, or otherwise damaged area from a tree during a windstorm, is usually a lost cause. If done successfully the limb must be reattached, or repaired, within minutes or even seconds after it is severed or broken. Time is very important so that the damaged area doesn’t “dry out” before it is repaired.

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Boxwood Hedge Slower to Recover From Pruning Damage Than Rosemary

Q. I have a neighbor concerned about his rosemary and boxwood hedges. The foliage has been falling off. Landscapers recommend he cut them to the ground to get them to recover but he opted to cut them back halfway instead. Now there is a lot of bare wood exposed with no leaves. What should he do to help them recover? A. When plants are continuously pruned with a hedge shears it causes them to get thick and bushy.             This increases their leaf density on the outer edges of the hedge. This causes the interior of the hedge to become very dark and the stems on the inside of the hedge to drop their leaves.             They also drop their leaves because the wood on the inside is old. All the new growth occurs where the hedge is being cut over and over. So perhaps only an inch or two along the outer surface of the hedge has leaves.             If we cut the hedge back more than a couple of inches, we expose the older wood that has no leaves. The wood is alive, but without leaves. Once this interior wood begins to receive sunlight again, new growth will sprout from this older wood.             The rate of growth from this older wood depends on the plant. Rosemary grows faster than boxwood. If he is patient, he will eventually start to see new growth coming from the older wood. Boxwood will also have new growth but will fill in slower than rosemary.             If he is patient both hedges will eventually slowly fill back in but boxwood will be much slower. In cases like these most people do not want to look at an ugly the hedge for the next few years and would elect to replace the damaged plants.             Once plants are cut with hedge shears for a few years over and over they are very difficult to reestablish again as plants that are not shaped like a hedge.

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