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Posted by JimR on July 10, 2006, 10:20 pm
If you were Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options Your description fits that of a tree that's been drowned in too much water,
which killed off many of the newest, fragile roots and made it difficult to
take up nutrients. When you first planted the tree it needed to be kept from
drying out completely, but once it was established, (by about June1) it
probably only needed about 3/4" of water 2-3 times a week. To help keep
moisture at an acceptable level, you also need about 2-3" of good mulch over
the rootball, but not touching the tree trunk.
As a check, with a small trowel or even a long screwdriver, poke around the
base of the tree. The surface may be dry, but you want to know about the
water level down at the root level. You'll probably find that the soil is
rather soggy, especially if your clay content is significant. Let the
underground rootball area dry out some, but not get completely dry (too dry
for mud pies, but more humid than a sandbox). Then give it about 3/4" of
water, either from rainfall or your irrigation system, wait for two days and
repeat. Good luck --
> Hey, everyone. I live in SE NC and I bought a double grafted dwarf pink
> double bloom cherry tree the first of May. Planted it in good drianing
> soil( a little clay/sand on the top1-2" and good dark soil underneath)
> where it got full sun in the AM & early PM and shade after 3pm (which the
> nursery keeper stated was fine) and keeping it watered every day. All
> things going good for a month (to the first of June) and then we had about
> a week of rain, off and on, so I did not water it for 5 days, as there was
> rain at least 2 hours everyday. Three days after the rain subsided and
> decided to move northward, my trees' leaves started to "curl" not tip to
> stem, but side to side and looked a little 'puney'. I had already started
> to watering it again for two days. The NEXT day the leaves turned yellow,
> but not on the tip of the branches, but near where the branches stemmed
> from the tree to about half way down the branches. Again, the very next
> day the yellow leaves started falling off. This is no exaggeration as it
> happened over a three day pass that these events too place. The tree
> still has green leaves on the end of the branches but is 'naked' from the
> trunk to the middle of the branches where the greenery begins. Any
> suggestions? Too much water? Not enough? Needs something extra? Thanks in
> advance for any advice.
>
>
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