Posted by Mysterious Traveler on June 21, 2010, 6:58 pm
Something got into a dwarf plum tree and stripped bark from
most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet above
the ground. There are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around here.
I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the tree
when I was out there.
What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep the
branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but with
this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
I'm hunting Wabbit...
Mysterious Traveler
Posted by David E. Ross on June 21, 2010, 7:31 pm
On 6/21/10 3:58 PM, Mysterious Traveler wrote:
> Something got into a dwarf plum tree and stripped bark from
> most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet above
> the ground. There are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
> about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around here.
> I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the tree
> when I was out there.
>
> What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep the
> branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
> a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but with
> this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
>
> I'm hunting Wabbit...
> Mysterious Traveler
>
>
Paint the wound with white glue to seal it. Use any general purpose
white glue: Willhold, Elmer's, Glue Bird, or a "house" brand.
Then buy 1/4-inch wire mesh, about 3 feet wide and long enough to wrap
loosely around the trunk more than twice. Wrap the mesh around the
trunk, not real tight but not real loose. Fasten the free end to the
rest of the mesh with bent paperclips. If you detect that some animal
has lifted the mesh, unwrap, staple the inner end to the trunk, and then
rewrap. Check the mesh 3-4 times during the growing season to make sure
that the trunk has not grown to make the mesh too tight.
--
David E. Ross
Climate: California Mediterranean
Sunset Zone: 21 -- interior Santa Monica Mountains with some ocean
influence (USDA 10a, very close to Sunset Zone 19)
Gardening diary at <http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary>
Posted by dodge 57 on June 22, 2010, 11:31 am
> On 6/21/10 3:58 PM, Mysterious Traveler wrote:
>> Something got into a dwarf plum tree and stripped bark
>> from
>> most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet
>> above
>> the ground. There are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
>> about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around
>> here.
>> I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the
>> tree
>> when I was out there.
>>
>> What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep
>> the
>> branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
>> a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but
>> with
>> this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
>>
>> I'm hunting Wabbit...
>> Mysterious Traveler
>>
>>
> Paint the wound with white glue to seal it. Use any
> general purpose
> white glue: Willhold, Elmer's, Glue Bird, or a "house"
> brand.
> Then buy 1/4-inch wire mesh, about 3 feet wide and long
> enough to wrap
> loosely around the trunk more than twice. Wrap the mesh
> around the
> trunk, not real tight but not real loose. Fasten the free
> end to the
> rest of the mesh with bent paperclips. If you detect that
> some animal
> has lifted the mesh, unwrap, staple the inner end to the
> trunk, and then
> rewrap. Check the mesh 3-4 times during the growing
> season to make sure
> that the trunk has not grown to make the mesh too tight.
> --
> David E. Ross
> Climate: California Mediterranean
Thanks, David, for the above info. Very informitive and
I'll keep
it for future reference.
Posted by Mysterious Traveler on June 22, 2010, 12:55 pm
On 06/21/2010 06:31 PM, David E. Ross wrote:
> On 6/21/10 3:58 PM, Mysterious Traveler wrote:
>> Something got into a dwarf plum tree and stripped bark from
>> most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet above
>> the ground. There are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
>> about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around here.
>> I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the tree
>> when I was out there.
>>
>> What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep the
>> branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
>> a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but with
>> this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
>>
>> I'm hunting Wabbit...
>> Mysterious Traveler
>>
>>
> Paint the wound with white glue to seal it. Use any general purpose
> white glue: Willhold, Elmer's, Glue Bird, or a "house" brand.
> Then buy 1/4-inch wire mesh, about 3 feet wide and long enough to wrap
> loosely around the trunk more than twice. Wrap the mesh around the
> trunk, not real tight but not real loose. Fasten the free end to the
> rest of the mesh with bent paperclips. If you detect that some animal
> has lifted the mesh, unwrap, staple the inner end to the trunk, and then
> rewrap. Check the mesh 3-4 times during the growing season to make sure
> that the trunk has not grown to make the mesh too tight.
That sounds like a good plan. I'll try that.
Thanks
Mysterious Traveler
Posted by brooklyn1 on June 22, 2010, 5:14 pm
Mysterious Traveler wrote:
>Something got into a dwarf plum tree and stripped bark from
> most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet above the ground. There
are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
> about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around here.
> I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the tree
> when I was out there.
It only takes one deer... unless your rabbit has Dumbo ears I
seriously doubt it could reach a few feet above the ground. However
deer don't leave teeth marks, neither rabbits... could be some other
critter.
> What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep the
> branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
> a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but with
> this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
Nowadays most arborists suggest placing nothing on tree bark wounds,
they'll heal more quickly and cleanly. Deer love stonefruit tree
bark, you'd best fence your trees.
> most of one side. It even got into the tree a few feet above
> the ground. There are teeth marks everywhere. The tree is
> about four feet tall and we don't have many deer around here.
> I'm guessing a rabbit. There was one that was near the tree
> when I was out there.
>
> What would be good to put on the stripped areas to keep the
> branches from dieing? Somewhere I heard that when pruning
> a tree it isn't necessary to put pruning paint on but with
> this much damage I think something needs to be applied.
>
> I'm hunting Wabbit...
> Mysterious Traveler
>
>