Xtremehorticulture

Texas Mountain Laurel Can Make a Medium High Landscape Screen

Q. I had Texas mountain laurel planted in my yard since 1998 and have not trimmed it at all; leaving it to look more shrub-like to act as a privacy screen, between the golf course and our pool.  It blooms profusely, leaving clusters of seed pods.  Would the tree benefit from having the pods removed, or is it best to leave them? Would I get more blooms if I trimmed off the pods? Texas mountain laurel seed pods are objectionable to some and look fine to others. Prune them off if you dont like them. It will not hurt the plant. A. Yes, the pods can be removed, and yes it makes more flowers when removed but the trigger for flowering is mostly in the early spring. Many people like the pods formed from the flowers as as well. The primary reason for removing the pods are looks; some people dont like their looks. Some do. Texas mountain laurel with spring flowers.             Texas mountain laurel is a Chihuahuan desert native plant so it can make a good heat tolerant 15 foot tall hedge after it is established. It would require about 2 to 4 feet of water applied under its canopy when mature. Remove only crossing branches to give it a full appearance and be careful about “limbing it up”. Let only knowledgeable landscapers prune this plant since it recovers slowly if mismanagement. Plant them no closer than about 8 feet apart.          They are relatively slow growing so it makes a privacy hedge that will be slow to fill empty spaces between them. Apply a fertilizer like 16-16-16 once in the early spring to get more and bigger blooms, prune it laterally so that it fills in these empty spaces faster.

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How to Control Scale Insects on Texas Mountain Laurel

Q. I planted a Sephora secundiflora in my backyard about 17 years ago. Today, I noticed many of the stems are infested with an insect that looks like a type of scale to me. The stems and leaves below the infested stems look wet and sticky.  The pavers underneath the plant are also wet and sticky.  Those small red bumps on the branches of Texas Mountain Laurel, Sophora secundiflora, are insects A. Your picture helped tremendously.  Those red bumps are scale insects Yes, you are correct. These brown, round bumps on the stems are scale insects. I have never seen these on Sophora, Texas Mount Laurel, before and I could find no reports of scale insects on this tree from anywhere. Scale insects provide a food for ant colonies, as do aphids. It’s mostly sugar from plant sap. That’s the sticky wetness you are seeing. Ants have a vested interest in protecting and colonizing ant and scale populations because of this sugary, sticky wetness. Horticultural oils are pesticides made, typically, from a refined mineral oil. .             The most effective control of scale insects are repeat stem sprays of horticultural oils. These sprays should be applied several times during the cooler times of the growing season. Combine this spray with ant control in the same area. Aphids and ants on apricot in Tajikistan             Ants move scale insects around, much like they do aphids, to different plant parts and even different plants. They contribute to the spread of scale insects in trees and shrubs and can turn a minor problem into a major problem in a couple of months. Some Amdro products are ant baits and can be used to kill an ant colony that is spreading and protecting insects producing sugary exudates like scale, aphids and others. Controlling ants             When controlling ants, use a poison bait in locations where there are problems. If there are no problems, no control treatment is necessary. Ants play a positive role in protecting plants from other insects.             An insecticide called Amdro, an ant bait, has been effective in controlling the spread of aphids by controlling ant colonies. I see no reason why this treatment would not also control the spread of scale insects. You can find Amdro ant bait at any garden center or nursery.             Most of our ants live in the ground in colonies. Identify the soil opening or openings to these ant colonies and spread 15 or 20 granules on top of an ant mound. Ants take this poisonous bait into the underground nest where it kills the entire population in 24 to 48 hours. The area where it’s applied must stay dry for 24 to 48 hours to work. Make sure the label of this product fits the needs at your site before applying it. When to spray horticultural oil             Horticultural oils are sprayed over the entire tree, top to bottom, if temperatures are below 90° F and no flowers are present. Repeating this spray three or four times during the growing season provides nearly 100% control of scale insects. Follow-up with soap and water sprays             Apply soap and water sprays to the tree 7 to 10 days after the horticultural oil application. Soap and water sprays kill any young nymphs that eluded the oil application. Remember, soap and water sprays, just like oil applications kill all insects sprayed, good or bad. Direct soap and water and oil sprays only to locations where there are problems. 

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Texas Mountain Laurel a Good Desert Landscape Choice

Texas Mountain Laurel or Mescal Bean Andrea Meckley, Certified Horticulturist [email protected]    Description:  flowering large shrub or small tree Mature size: 15-20 feet tall x 8-10 feet wide Water use:  low to medium Exposure:  all day sun to half day sun Origin: Texas, New Mexico, northern Mexico Caution: red seeds are poisonous Flower:  purple sweet scented blooms early spring Hardy:  0 degrees F Evergreen Texas Mountain Laurel (Sophora segundiflora) slowly grows naturally as a shrub or can be trained as multi trunk tree.  The poisonous seeds have a coat that is very hard and difficult to crack limiting risks to humans and pets if swallowed.  Native peoples used the seeds for ceremonial use and ornamental jewelry.  Use this plant as a hedge, screen or accent plant.

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Texas Moutain Laurel with Yellow Leaves

Q. My Texas Mountain Laurel has yellow leaves and they continue to get more yellow as time goes by. It faces southwest, has 2 adjustable emitters turned down low, in the winter watering once a week for one hour. In early August I fed it with a fertilizer for acid-loving plants. I have looked very closely for bugs, and see none. There are some brown spots that have been appearing on the leaves. Want to see what this plant looks like? A. This plant is native to the Chihuahuan desert and so is accustomed to very low rainfall, particularly during the summer months. This doesn’t mean you should not water it in the summer but it does tell me that it would prefer deep but less frequent irrigations at the time of the year.             It is also not accustomed to high amounts of fertilizer and does not need fertilizers blended for acid loving plants. This plant grows easily in alkaline soils. It is a legume so go lightly with the fertilizers.             Generally speaking, deep irrigations to a depth of 12 to 18 inches, once a week should be fine during the summer months. You should be able to water less often in the winter. They are found on rocky soils in the desert but I am sure that they would prefer improved soils as long as they drain water.             In the spring this plant tends to get a caterpillar, the larva of the Genista moth, in it that feeds on the leaves. Sprays containing Bt, like Dipel or Thuricide or even Spinosad, should control it with one or two applications when you start to see them. Genista moth on Texas Mountain Laurel

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