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Saturday, August 18, 2012
Almond Tree 8 Yrs Old Bearing No Nuts
Q. We have two almond trees and since they produce nuts we
assume that one is male and the other one female, although we do not know which
is which. However, one tree bears almost no nuts. I just checked and could find
only two nuts on the entire tree. The other tree is loaded with nuts. The two
trees were planted at the same time, eight or ten years ago. Can you explain
this disparity in production?
A. Even though almond flowers contain both male and female
parts, some almonds require pollinators while a few others do not. Since you
did not tell me the varieties I am not sure which you have.
Almonds in bloom at the Orchard in North Las Vegas |
See if you
can find out what the variety is and let me know. Once I know that, I can tell
you a good pollinator to use. You probably do not want a third almond tree but
maybe you can talk to your neighbors into getting one.
The other
option you have is to drive around town looking for another almond tree in
bloom at the same time you're nutless almond is blooming. If you can find one
in bloom at the same time, see if you can convince them to let you cut a few
branches from their tree to supply pollen for yours.
Immediately
after cutting the branches, put them in a bucket of water directly beneath the
nutless tree. This bouquet of almond flowers, providing it is a different
variety, can act as a source of pollen for your tree. Otherwise, get rid of the
nutless almond and put in Garden Prince or All in One almond variety which are
self-fertile.
Who Stole My Almonds?
Q. I live on Black Mountain in Anthem in Henderson, Nv. I have an almond tree about 3 feet high. It must have had about 2 dozen almonds on
it. I woke up yesterday morning and all
the almonds were gone over nite without a trace of hulks or shells. What animal could have taken 24 almonds over
nite?
A. This is probably the culprit. As soon as I was ready to take his picture, he did this to me! The antelope ground squirrel.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
UNLV Center BBQ, Plant Sale and Science August 23
The August UNLV Research Center BBQ, Plant Sale and
Garden Talk will get underway on Thursday, August 23, starting at 6:30 PM with
the BBQ and Cactus Sale. Garden talks featured will be Getting to Know Your Soil by Dr. Dale Devitt of UNLV and The Colorado River and the Future of Water
by Dr. Tom Piechota. For directions or more information please call UNLV
Biology at 702-895-3853. Click on it if you want it bigger!
Oleanders Drop Leaves in Drought. Will it Recover?
Q. I read the post on your blog on oleanders with
interest. I too have an issue. My five oleanders are mature (at least 20 years
old) trees. When we moved here a year
ago they had not been watered. When the
water was turned on and major landscaping installed, many of the leaves turned
yellow and dropped. However the trees blossomed and continued to do fine.
During
the rains the gardener turned off the water system and sadly forgot to turn it back
on. The water is of course back on but I have had to replace many bushes, although
NOT the oleanders. However they have
begun to turn yellow again and are dropping leaves. There are still a majority
of green leaves and the trees are about to burst into blooms. They have been
fertilized, as has everything on the property, but I am baffled. Would you be so kind as to give me your
advice on what is happening and why?
A. Oleanders are so extensive worldwide that no one is
sure where they originated from. Their climate of origin is important because
it determines under what conditions these plants perform best but we do know
quite a bit about how oleanders behave with and without water.
We know
that they are very drought tolerant. This means that when there is limited
water, they can survive. Many plants can’t do this. Normally when drought
tolerant plants first experience a lack of water the leaves will drop and the
canopy will become sparse. If the water continues to be sparse the leaves they
produce will be few and smaller and little new growth. They have to have a
sparse canopy to survive.
However
when water is present they have the potential for using a large amount of water
and are not low water users. They respond to this water by growing more,
setting new leaves that are quite a bit larger and shedding the old ones. The
plant itself becomes denser and flowers profusely (provided they are not
trimmed with a hedge shears).
Leaf
drop is very characteristic in response to a drought. It is also characteristic
when they receive water again after a drought. It is also characteristic of
older growth to shed some leaves on older wood.
So, in a
nutshell, going from drought to abundant water expect some leaf drop. And when
oleander grows normally, expect some leaf drop as the plant matures but not
typically as much as during dry/wet periods. So is oleander a good pool plant?
No.
Labels:
drought,
drought resistance,
leaf drop,
leaf scorch,
oleander
What Do I Do? My Lawn Has Dead Spots in Summer
Whatever you do, DON'T rake up the dead grass now and reseed or resod. Dead spots in a lawn are ugly. But what can be worse if you are not careful is to open up your lawn to a weed invasion, particularly bermudagrass, if you try to clean up these dead spots now. Wait. Wait until Fall, around mid September to mid October, to rake it up and reseed or resod.
If you try to reseed it now you will fail. Even laying sod right now will be difficult to keep alive. But if you rake up that dead area and expose the bare soil to sunshine and irrigation, bermudagrass WILL seed itself right into those spots. And then you WILL have a problem. Leave the dead grass alone and let it "mulch" or cover the dead area, protecting it from invasion by bermudagrass.
Powdery Mildew on Tomato... what to do?
Q. I have a problem with my heirloom tomatoes the leaves on top have mildew on them what is
causing this? I have never had this problem before. The plant is producing
tomatoes and the leaves on top are still green.
I am baffled!
This is not tomato but it gives you an idea what powdery mildew looks like. It looks like someone sprinkled the plants with wheat flour |
Powdery mildews can attack numerous plants but each type
of powdery mildew is specific to that plant. Powdery mildew is a common disease
in desert environments because it can be very active under very low humidities.
The environment for this disease to occur is usually the
same; somewhat shady areas frequently irrigated with overhead sprinkler type
irrigations. This causes water to splash when it hits surfaces. This splashing
water can carry the disease from one plant of the same type to a neighboring
plant.
Nonchemical control of powdery mildew is the same for all
types; reduce or eliminate the shade problem and the splashing water problem.
Use drip irrigation. Improve air circulation among the plants by not planting
too close together and don't let them shade each other. Give them some space
and dont over fertilize them so they get real bushy and have alot of internal
shading. Thin out the canopies of the plants to improve air circulation. Go to
a different type of growing. Dont let them sprawl but stake them and tie them
to stakes to get them more vertical and improve air circulation.
Usually if you can do all this you will not need a
fungicide. Otherwise there are fungicides you can apply to keep it from
spreading.
Labels:
powdery mildew,
tomato,
vegetable disease,
white spots
Japanese Blueberry Leaves Falling and Canopy Thinning
Q. My problem is with my Japanese Blueberry trees. Leaves
seem to fall prematurely, browning and yellowish. One of the trees bark is
peeling off and appeared to be dry. There are no visible insects but I do not
know what to find anyway. I have spent so much money on them for them to die.
Please help.
Not the readers but Japanese blueberries planted along a block wall. |
If you
planted this Japanese blueberry from a 15 gallon container then it will require
about 15 gallons of water each time you water.
The amount of water must increase from this amount as the plant gets
larger from year to year.
This can
be accomplished by adding minutes to your existing irrigation schedule at each
watering or adding additional emitters. The
frequency in the application of water, but not the number of gallons per
application, will vary from season to season.
There is
generally are a winter schedule, spring schedule, summer schedule, fall
schedule and back to a winter schedule which means you should increase the
number of times you irrigate per week about four times each year. These schedules will coincide approximately
with December 1, February 1, May 1, mid-June, mid-September and finally
December 1 which completes the seasonal cycle.
Because
your plant did not have the fullness that you would like, I would assume it is
due to improper irrigation which may also lead to infestation with borers. Pull off the loose bark at you see and look
for damage in the wood do too boring insects.
This would include sawdust under the bark and perhaps elliptical exit
holes from the trunk under the damaged area.
If the damage is more than half way around the trunk then I would
replace the plant.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Yellowing of Meyer Lemon Tree Leaves Hard to Correct
Q. We went and talked to nursery folks a couple times about this tree.
First we got the water cycle correct, then iron was suggested which we did as directed. Then a soil amendment was suggested. Online I read possibly the tree
suffers from a magnesium issue. I thought these photos would give a better
picture. We did as directed and the tree is not
responding in fact it is getting worse. I am wondering if it is because of
where it was planted which is a confined root growing area. Any insight would
be appreciated.
A. By looking at the leaves I have to assume this is a
Meyer Lemon (which is, by the way not technically a lemon but an unknown hybrid
found in a Chinese back yard by USDA researcher D. Meyer in the early 20th
century).
Your pictures are all pretty good with the exception of not showing a critical view of the trunk where it is just out of the soil. Just for future reference always look at and show this interface of the trunk and soil. W/o that view I have to only guess that the rootstock/trunk union is well out of the soil and we can eliminate that issue. And, a shot of the soil might show how the plant is getting watered. I have to assume drippers and I would guess they are in the same locations as when the plant was planted.
Readers lemon tree with yellowing leaves |
Your pictures are all pretty good with the exception of not showing a critical view of the trunk where it is just out of the soil. Just for future reference always look at and show this interface of the trunk and soil. W/o that view I have to only guess that the rootstock/trunk union is well out of the soil and we can eliminate that issue. And, a shot of the soil might show how the plant is getting watered. I have to assume drippers and I would guess they are in the same locations as when the plant was planted.
The leaves show two distinctive symptoms that often occur
in concert: 1. There is some salt burn and 2. The common symptom that comes
with salt issues is the magnesium deficiency. Just FYI Iron deficiency only occurs on
the new leaves.
Closer look at readers yellowing leaves |
For the salinity (salt) issue we usually look first at
the watering and with watering comes knowing if the water can even be applied
uniformly all around the edge of the canopy, sometimes called the 'drip line'.
Citrus are botanically a shrub with shallow and wide spreading roots that are tough to grow to maturity with drippers unless they are closely spaced in a wide band around the canopy's edge. There is one picture showing the plant is right next to a step wall with no water being applied in that zone of the root system.
I would not worry too much about adding any supplements and see if you
can begin to manage a watering system of application that would give a long
deep soaking water application out near the drip line. The 'soaker' hoses could
be laid out on the ground out near the drip line and let it run for hours and
hours to try and leach out the excess salts that may have accumulated over time
with the drip system. Drip systems are fine but, due to their limited water
output salts can begin to accumulate thus impacting citrus' sensitivity to
salts.
Citrus are botanically a shrub with shallow and wide spreading roots that are tough to grow to maturity with drippers unless they are closely spaced in a wide band around the canopy's edge. There is one picture showing the plant is right next to a step wall with no water being applied in that zone of the root system.
Clear look at the yellowing or chlorosis problem on readers citrus |
Give it a long deep watering about once every few weeks
from now on all during the growing season (May through October) to supplement the regular water to leach out
the salts that inevitably are deposited with the limited volume of drip systems
. .This leaching watering is also the great time to add fertilizer and get it
into the soil evenly all around the active roots near the drip line.
-Terry Mikel
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