View Full Version : Freeze Kill? Ficus Nitida
Brandon
04-01-2004, 09:12 AM
I am in Gilbert Arizona( metro phoenix). Last week we experienced sub
freezing ( 22-24 degrees)temperatures for several nights. Anything potted
was brought in the house.
4 Giant Hibiscus and 3 monster Bougainvilleas and a very large Castor bean
"tree" wilted( foliage appears "burned") and have started to drop all there
leaves.
Not a big deal , I think the bougainvilleas will come back as they are so
hard to kill : /
BUT my concern is a 15+ foot Ficus Nitida with a trunk diameter of 10+
inches...
The leaves turned purple, and then in the last day or so, they have started
to drop in profusion. My neighbor has three like this doing the same thing.
I am wondering if this tree has been killed. Will my homeowners insurance
cover it if it has? I have seen trees half this size at local nurseries for
$3000.00.
Will it come back? ( will this be a good time to prune it?
Thanks
Brandon
Pam - gardengal
04-01-2004, 06:02 PM
"Brandon" > wrote in message
news:_LQJb.24492$ti2.11820@lakeread03...
> I am in Gilbert Arizona( metro phoenix). Last week we experienced sub
> freezing ( 22-24 degrees)temperatures for several nights. Anything potted
> was brought in the house.
> 4 Giant Hibiscus and 3 monster Bougainvilleas and a very large Castor bean
> "tree" wilted( foliage appears "burned") and have started to drop all
there
> leaves.
> Not a big deal , I think the bougainvilleas will come back as they are so
> hard to kill : /
>
> BUT my concern is a 15+ foot Ficus Nitida with a trunk diameter of 10+
> inches...
> The leaves turned purple, and then in the last day or so, they have
started
> to drop in profusion. My neighbor has three like this doing the same
thing.
>
> I am wondering if this tree has been killed. Will my homeowners insurance
> cover it if it has? I have seen trees half this size at local nurseries
for
> $3000.00.
>
> Will it come back? ( will this be a good time to prune it?
>
They prefer temps to remain above 40F but they can tolerate light freezes.
Leaf drop is very common at this point.and is to be expected. I'd wait until
all danger of cold temperatures have passed to assess how much damage was
done and do remedial pruning at that time. How long it tolerated these
conditions will have a bearing on how well it comes back.
You need to read your policy well, but I doubt you can claim this on your
homeowners insurance. Most policies will not cover landscaping damaged due
to "acts of God". If that were the case, more northern homeowners would have
HUGE claims for all the plants that are unable to make it through their
often brutal winters. The good news is, ficus grow fast if you have to
replace it.
pam - gardengal
MLEBLANCA
04-01-2004, 09:42 PM
In article <P1VJb.729829$HS4.5465310@attbi_s01>, "Pam - gardengal"
> writes:
>> Will it come back? ( will this be a good time to prune it?
>>
>
>They prefer temps to remain above 40F but they can tolerate light freezes.
>Leaf drop is very common at this point.and is to be expected. I'd wait until
>all danger of cold temperatures have passed to assess how much damage was
>done and do remedial pruning at that time. How long it tolerated these
>conditions will have a bearing on how well it comes back.
>
......................
>
>pam - gardengal
>
I agree with Pam. Don't add injury to insult. Leave it alone
until you begin to see any new growth buds. (if any).
If any top parts are obviously dead, ie mushy/black,
you could remove those.
Emilie
V_coerulea
05-01-2004, 12:32 AM
For the messy berries, deal with it. That's what a ficus does best. That's
its whole reason for being. Like those that grow crab apples, maples, oaks,
even pines, there's the mess to deal with. It's minot compared to the
benefits they provide.
Gary
"Brandon" > wrote in message
news:Zn_Jb.24535$ti2.12039@lakeread03...
>
> "Pam - gardengal" > wrote in message
> news:P1VJb.729829$HS4.5465310@attbi_s01...
> >
> > "Brandon" > wrote in message
> > news:_LQJb.24492$ti2.11820@lakeread03...
> > > I am in Gilbert Arizona( metro phoenix). Last week we experienced sub
> > > freezing ( 22-24 degrees)temperatures for several nights. Anything
> potted
> > > was brought in the house.
> > > 4 Giant Hibiscus and 3 monster Bougainvilleas and a very large Castor
> bean
> > > "tree" wilted( foliage appears "burned") and have started to drop all
> > there
> > > leaves.
> > > Not a big deal , I think the bougainvilleas will come back as they are
> so
> > > hard to kill : /
> > >
> > > BUT my concern is a 15+ foot Ficus Nitida with a trunk diameter of 10+
> > > inches...
> > > The leaves turned purple, and then in the last day or so, they have
> > started
> > > to drop in profusion. My neighbor has three like this doing the same
> > thing.
> > >
> > > I am wondering if this tree has been killed. Will my homeowners
> insurance
> > > cover it if it has? I have seen trees half this size at local
nurseries
> > for
> > > $3000.00.
> > >
> > > Will it come back? ( will this be a good time to prune it?
> > >
> >
> > They prefer temps to remain above 40F but they can tolerate light
freezes.
> > Leaf drop is very common at this point.and is to be expected. I'd wait
> until
> > all danger of cold temperatures have passed to assess how much damage
was
> > done and do remedial pruning at that time. How long it tolerated these
> > conditions will have a bearing on how well it comes back.
> >
> > You need to read your policy well, but I doubt you can claim this on
your
> > homeowners insurance. Most policies will not cover landscaping damaged
due
> > to "acts of God". If that were the case, more northern homeowners would
> have
> > HUGE claims for all the plants that are unable to make it through their
> > often brutal winters. The good news is, ficus grow fast if you have to
> > replace it.
> >
> > pam - gardengal
>
> Thanks, I had hoped this may be the case really, I don't want to replace
it,
> is a beautiful tree.
> This may actually be a good thing if it will come back, because now I can
> prune it with the advantage of having a better view of the branch
structure.
> This will allow me to shape the tree better.
> One other question, is there anything that will prevent a ficus from
> fruiting? Those annoying little berries it produces create quite a mess.
>
> Thanks
> Brandon
>
>
Brandon
09-01-2004, 10:42 PM
"Pam - gardengal" > wrote in message
news:P1VJb.729829$HS4.5465310@attbi_s01...
>
> "Brandon" > wrote in message
> news:_LQJb.24492$ti2.11820@lakeread03...
> > I am in Gilbert Arizona( metro phoenix). Last week we experienced sub
> > freezing ( 22-24 degrees)temperatures for several nights. Anything
potted
> > was brought in the house.
> > 4 Giant Hibiscus and 3 monster Bougainvilleas and a very large Castor
bean
> > "tree" wilted( foliage appears "burned") and have started to drop all
> there
> > leaves.
> > Not a big deal , I think the bougainvilleas will come back as they are
so
> > hard to kill : /
> >
> > BUT my concern is a 15+ foot Ficus Nitida with a trunk diameter of 10+
> > inches...
> > The leaves turned purple, and then in the last day or so, they have
> started
> > to drop in profusion. My neighbor has three like this doing the same
> thing.
> >
> > I am wondering if this tree has been killed. Will my homeowners
insurance
> > cover it if it has? I have seen trees half this size at local nurseries
> for
> > $3000.00.
> >
> > Will it come back? ( will this be a good time to prune it?
> >
>
> They prefer temps to remain above 40F but they can tolerate light freezes.
> Leaf drop is very common at this point.and is to be expected. I'd wait
until
> all danger of cold temperatures have passed to assess how much damage was
> done and do remedial pruning at that time. How long it tolerated these
> conditions will have a bearing on how well it comes back.
>
> You need to read your policy well, but I doubt you can claim this on your
> homeowners insurance. Most policies will not cover landscaping damaged due
> to "acts of God". If that were the case, more northern homeowners would
have
> HUGE claims for all the plants that are unable to make it through their
> often brutal winters. The good news is, ficus grow fast if you have to
> replace it.
>
> pam - gardengal
Thanks, I had hoped this may be the case really, I don't want to replace it,
is a beautiful tree.
This may actually be a good thing if it will come back, because now I can
prune it with the advantage of having a better view of the branch structure.
This will allow me to shape the tree better.
One other question, is there anything that will prevent a ficus from
fruiting? Those annoying little berries it produces create quite a mess.
Thanks
Brandon
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