Xtremehorticulture

Shrub Dieback Due to Excessive Heat and Lack of Water

Q. I have several really tall thick pittosporum plants – some well
over 7 feet tall and usually thick with foliage, but this year they seem to
have suffered a LOT from the heat.  I checked at the base and the most
damaged one — down to a mere skeleton — is getting water.  They are
about 20 years old — is there an “age limit” to plants like these?

Thats a good looking full-sized Pittosporum with good leaf color. Obviously healthy.

Are they THAT heat sensitive?  I’d hate to lose them all.
 When, and how severely, should I prune?  Take the more damaged ones
back down to sticks and hope for recovery?

Drought on Pittosporum due to high temperatures and wind.

A. That is what a full-sized Pittosporum is
supposed to look like. I like the color in the form of the undamaged plant. 
The
damage top and suckering from the base tells me the plant is putting on some
new growth where it is easiest for it. When everything is optimum, the plant
will always try to get larger and put new growth as high as it can. When
conditions are not optimum, then it will try to put on growth in places where
it spends the least amount of energy and trouble. 
Sprouting occurred due to the cuts made on the stems and the stem exposure to sunlight combined with…thats an easy place for the plant to put on new growth. You remove something and it will try to regrow in that spot to get that energy from the sun.

The damage at the top in the
suckering at the base tell me the plant is not getting enough water when it is
watered. Plus it was opened up with some pruning cuts at the base. I would add 2 or 3 more drip emitters to the base of that plant and
try to cover at least half of the ground under its canopy with water. This
means spread the drip emitters out about 12 to 18 inches apart under its
spread. 
I would also put about one bag of compost under the large plants and
water it in with the hose. Keep the area wet for the following 1 to 2 weeks. I
think you will see a change in 2 to 3 weeks. Prune out the dead branches by
cutting at a Y or joint between the dead branch and a living branch deep inside
the canopy, 8 to 10 inches inside of it.

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