Posted by bruceh on April 2, 2008, 1:39 pm
My father has a couple of old (Japanese?) pine trees, each
about 8 feet tall in which the needles are browning.
He says that he only waters the trees and has never used
any fertilizer.
Is there any fertilizer/additive that can help with
these trees?
TIA
Posted by Phisherman on April 2, 2008, 3:42 pm
>My father has a couple of old (Japanese?) pine trees, each
>about 8 feet tall in which the needles are browning.
>He says that he only waters the trees and has never used
>any fertilizer.
>Is there any fertilizer/additive that can help with
>these trees?
>TIA
Don't need to fertilize pine trees. They can be mulched but the mulch
should not touch the bark. There are acres of dead pine trees in the
hills of TN due to pine beetle destruction.
Posted by bruceh on April 2, 2008, 4:42 pm
Phisherman wrote:
>
>> My father has a couple of old (Japanese?) pine trees, each
>> about 8 feet tall in which the needles are browning.
>> He says that he only waters the trees and has never used
>> any fertilizer.
>>
>> Is there any fertilizer/additive that can help with
>> these trees?
>>
>> TIA
>
>
> Don't need to fertilize pine trees. They can be mulched but the mulch
> should not touch the bark. There are acres of dead pine trees in the
> hills of TN due to pine beetle destruction.
I have heard of the beetle problems as the forests here in
Southern California have been infected due to the droughts.
As I understand it, however, it's due to the lack of water
that the trees have weakened and could not naturally fight
off the beetles. My father does water the trees so I'm
thinking this is not the problem.
So if fertilizers are not required, a thought came to
my mind. If I remember the way the soil is around the
base, it may be a bit compacted. Could compacted soil
prevent the roots from getting enough water? BTW, he
doesn't mulch.
Posted by Bill on April 2, 2008, 5:09 pm
> Phisherman wrote:
> >
> >> My father has a couple of old (Japanese?) pine trees, each
> >> about 8 feet tall in which the needles are browning.
> >> He says that he only waters the trees and has never used
> >> any fertilizer.
> >>
> >> Is there any fertilizer/additive that can help with
> >> these trees?
> >>
> >> TIA
> >
> >
> > Don't need to fertilize pine trees. They can be mulched but the mulch
> > should not touch the bark. There are acres of dead pine trees in the
> > hills of TN due to pine beetle destruction.
>
> I have heard of the beetle problems as the forests here in
> Southern California have been infected due to the droughts.
> As I understand it, however, it's due to the lack of water
> that the trees have weakened and could not naturally fight
> off the beetles. My father does water the trees so I'm
> thinking this is not the problem.
>
> So if fertilizers are not required, a thought came to
> my mind. If I remember the way the soil is around the
> base, it may be a bit compacted. Could compacted soil
> prevent the roots from getting enough water? BTW, he
> doesn't mulch.
I've no idea what a Japanese pine is but I have one Chinese black
Pine. Around here they mulch themselves as do the white pine.. However
I rob it and add the needles to my foot paths. If you are have a
general malaise with the whole tree involved I'm clues less. I've have
many white pine with some sort of borer that kills the new top growth
but the tree's seem to be able to carry on sometimes sending up a new
leader.
Now you got me looking about for a Japanese pine.
Bill lover of things unfamiliar.
--
Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA
Posted by symplastless on April 2, 2008, 9:51 pm
> I've no idea what a Japanese pine is but I have one Chinese black
> Pine. Around here they mulch themselves as do the white pine.. However
> I rob it and add the needles to my foot paths. If you are have a
> general malaise with the whole tree involved I'm clues less. I've have
> many white pine with some sort of borer that kills the new top growth
> but the tree's seem to be able to carry on sometimes sending up a new
> leader.
This usually happens to white pines grown out in the open. It is called the
"white pine weevil". You can train one young branch to be the new leader.
Maybe about what, 15 year old trees?
--
Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Consulting Forester & Tree Expert
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.
>about 8 feet tall in which the needles are browning.
>He says that he only waters the trees and has never used
>any fertilizer.
>Is there any fertilizer/additive that can help with
>these trees?
>TIA