Citrus trees maybe dying after front?

register ::  Login Password  :: Lost Password?
This Thread
Bookmark this thread:
 
 
 
 
 
 
  •  
  • Subject
  • Author
  • Date
Posted by Suzanne D. on February 12, 2011, 7:19 pm
 
please rate
this thread
I live in southern Utah, zone 7 or 8.

Last spring I bought four dwarf citrus trees (Valencia orange, bearrs lime,
eureka lemon, ruby red grapefruit) and kept them in their pots.  They got
hit by some frost outside a couple of times, and their leaves got brown and
started to fall off.  I brought the four trees inside.

The orange tree recently got leaves again.  The other three seem to be
greenish on the root stock, but I can't see green under the bark on the
upper part.  The branches are brittle, but there seems to be a little
softness under some of them.

Little sprouts started coming out on the root stock...I figured those were
suckers, and I removed them.  Was that the right thing to do?

If a tree grew well the previous year, then does a healthy root stock mean a
healthy tree, or is it possible for the upper part to die while the bottom
stays fresh?

Thanks for any info, advice, etc. you can give.
--S.



Posted by Derald on February 12, 2011, 11:48 pm
 


    Yes

    Yes. It is quite common. Common practice is to graft desired
varieties to more cold-hardy rootstock.
--
Derald