Xtremehorticulture

Majestic Beauty Leaves Browning on the Edges May Be Drip Problem

Q. The edges of the leaves on my Majestic Beauty are getting brown and crispy. Is that salt burn? They get watered twice each week for 20 minutes and each plant has two emitters. Leaf burn on Majestic Beauty from the reader. A. Whenever you see burning or scorching on the edges of leaves or on the leaf tip it is a sign that the plant is not getting enough water or there are toxic or excessive salts in the soil. However, knowing the number of emitters and how long they deliver water (20 minutes) does not tell me how much water is being applied. Drip emitters are variable in their output depending on the type of emitter. All delivered amounts for drip irrigation are in gallons per hour. Drip emitter at the end of 1/4 inch tubing releasing water at the base of a tree The most common drip emitters cannot deliver more than 5 gallons per hour. So if there were two, five gallon per hour emitters present, the most water that plant would get in 20 minutes is about three gallons. I don’t know the size of this plant but that is not much water in one application to a tree.             Other reasons the plant may not be getting enough water is that the water is applied incorrectly, roots are damaged so the plant can’t take up enough water, the plant trunk is damaged so not enough water moves up the trunk or damaged stems. If amendments heavy in salts were used at planting time these salts can compete for water with the plant causing leaves to scorch or the types of salts present were or are toxic. This time of year (March) watering twice a week is not too often provided the soil is draining adequately and not staying wet between irrigations. I would visually inspect the tree for damage to the trunk and limbs. Move the drip emitters away from the trunk about a foot to 18 inches and add an extra emitter. Four drip emitters were installed on this newly planted and staked tree with rock mulch. The emitters should be placed on the outside of the the rootball and not next to the trunk. If these drip emitters were five gallon per hour emitters and the irrigation was run for one hour then this tree would get 20 gallons each time it is watered which is about right for a 24 inch boxed tree. and place them in triangulation around the trunk. In the meantime flood the area around the tree once a week for three weeks with a hose so you can flush excessive salts and solve the lack of water which solves A and B and F and may help in G Most likely the roots were not damaged unless the water was not draining

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Is My Photinia Over or Under Watered?

Q. I have no idea if I am over watering or under watering. My red tip photina plants are all brown and dropping leaves left and right. My sago is turning yellow. I have a drip system and it is set for twice a day ever other day for 10 minutes. Is that enough? Photinia growing in rock mulch A. Usually drip irrigation is measured in gallons per hour, not in the number of minutes it was operating. Each emitter operates in a specific number of gallons, or fraction of a gallon or liters, it will deliver in one hour.  Problem photinia Drip irrigation does not need to come on twice a day unless the drip emitters are those emitters I don’t like very much, the kind you can twist open and get some unknown volume of water. Under the right conditions those will put out so much water that it can run all over the place. Then you might need to have it come on several times just to keep the water in one spot. With drip irrigation you should apply all of the water it requires in one application.  If your drip irrigation is operating at the same time as your lawn is being watered then this is a big no- no. This is frequently why drip is operating in that ten to fifteen minute range. Lawns should be irrigated separately from trees and shrubs.  In your case, If your drip system is applying 2 gallons per hour through the emitters then the plant is getting 1/3 gallon each time you water which is 2/3 gallon total every other day.  The larger the plant, the more water should be applied to it.  For a one foot tall plant try and give it about 1 gallon of water each time you irrigate.  If your plant is 2 feet tall then try giving it to a gallons of water each time you irrigate.  If plants are 5 feet tall, give them about five gallons of water at each irrigation.  This is a very rough estimate.  My sense is that you may be under irrigating. Photinia after corrective action was taken Photinia have another big a problem if they are growing in rock mulch.  In rock mulch, they tend to yellow and begin to scorch around five years after they have been planted.  The soil under the rock mulch has become mineralized and they can not take up enough nutrients to satisfy their needs.  You can try to supplement these mineral requirements by adding a good fertilizer once or twice a year and an iron chelate to the soil in about late January or February.  Try using a good quality fertilizer for trees and shrubs like miracle grow and add an iron chelate to the soil such as iron EDDHA.  It is hard to find and expensive but usually Plant World Nursery on Charleston boulevard carries it. If a Sago palm is planted in a very hot location with lots of reflected light it can begin to yellow.  It can also begin to yellow if we have a very low winter temperatures.  You will see yellowing due to very cold low temperatures very early in the spring or late winter.  If it is yellowing because of a lack of iron then the iron chelate mentioned above will correct it.  If the yellowing is because of watering too often then you may correct it by correcting your irrigation and not watering twice each day but watering only once on the irrigation day but applying more water.  

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