Xtremehorticulture

My Myers Lemon Tree Just Crashed

Q. One of our mature Meyer lemons just crashed. I think we are giving it enough water. Were watering it once a week. I fertilized it and applied Kerex iron. A. It is the end of May. Make sure it is not water problem. Right now, we should be applying water to it (at least half of the spread of its canopy and to a depth of 18 to 24 inches) twice a week starting about 2 to 3 weeks ago for most soils and fruit trees in the Las Vegas area. That is the first thing to take care of before we start correcting other problems. It is mesic in its water use, not a desert tree. During spring is a dangerous time to fiddle with the amount of water. If you skimp on water while the fruit is getting larger, then it may make fruit smaller because you were not applying enough water. Enough water MUST be available to the fruit as they enlarge if you want the fruit larger.  Never daily. That’s a no-no. If water is applied too often then diseases are a problem. The first thing to do is make sure there is enough water present for fruit formation, but not watering daily so that diseases develop. Right now for most soils we should be watering twice a week in Las Vegas and using a thick surface mulch.             Next are the nutrients. For the fruit and trees to be healthy and to produce healthy fruit, all nutrients should be present. That’s the purpose of wood chips plus fertilizer. They rot or decompose when water is present. That’s why we fertilize fruit trees at least once or twice a year with the macro nutrients nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium (NPK). Iron applications are different. Iron is a MICRO nutrient and not available in many of our desert soils because of the soil pH. Iron is needed in much smaller amounts, but it is still very important. In fact, it is essential (along with manganese and zinc). All three are affected a lot by a soil’s alkalinity or acidity (pH). All three of these micro nutrients are affected by (in our soil especially iron) their availability in a high pH desert soil. Any yellowing of leaves can be any of these three nutrients! But iron is MOST LIKELY in our desert soil. Many of our iron fertilizers (any of the older iron types) ONLY works if the pH (alkalinity) of our soil is measured at 6.8 or lower. EDDHA chelated iron was made so that it works at any soil alkalinity (any pH)! Any type of iron, including EDDHA, must be applied to our soil only from February through about May. The closer to February, the better. Let’s clear up the water and mulch problems first. After that is done, we can talk about other tree issues that might pop up. Water is the biggest problem (not enough or watered too often) your tree is facing!

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Depth of Watering

Q. Many of your articles talk about the depth of the water when watering. Having the drips on top of the ground can make it hard to get the water to the desired depth.  If you want watering at 12″, what is your opinion of putting a piece of plastic pipe to that depth, then just put the drip line down the pipe so it drips at 12″!  If you are worried about spreading the water out, you could always put a larger pipe or plastic junction box at the bottom. A. It does not change how much water it needs. The surface 3 to 4 inches of surface mulch nearly eliminates evaporation from the soil (the E part of ET). I would not use any devices that divert water deeper. It just costs money and adds to the watering confusion. It will need the same amount regardless. Most plants rely on water that fills the soil from “top to bottom”. The depth of applied water depends on the height of the tree. Generally speaking, small trees (less than 20 feet in height) require less water than large trees (more than 40 feet tall).             Did you ever hear of the 40-30-20-10 rule in a landscape? Landscape plant roots range from about 12 inches to three feet deep. The taller the plant, the deeper its roots. Divide landscape plant roots into four equal parts (quartiles). The quartile closest to the soil surface uses about 40% of the applied water, the next quartile uses about 30%, the next uses about 20% and the last quartile uses about 10% of the applied water.             Quartiles are human inventions. As water in this 40% quartile becomes more difficult to extract, the plant uses the next quartile, and the next, and finally the last. Plants don’t use any more “effort” than they need to! For nondesert plants we schedule a new irrigation when this water is about 50 to 60% gone.             So you see, all landscape plants require water to fill the soil so that all their roots are wet from “top to bottom”. Just remember, the taller the plant the more water is applied!

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