View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 16-06-2014, 01:24 AM posted to rec.gardens
ElCuartoMago ElCuartoMago is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jun 2014
Posts: 4
Default Tulip Trees Dying?!?!

They've been growing in a very wet area for the nearly 20 years..... not a "swamp" but it is a flood zone.

I'll try bringing in some gypsum but I have to be careful. It's a very wet and you can't really bring equipment in. it would have to be hand trucked (wheelbarrow). is there a suggested cubic yardage/square yard that I should be targeting?

I've already moved a great deal of the debris (mostly like a river river sand and many many rocks). the surface roots makes sense as the above (i'm guessing) might have have suffocated the surface roots in that area.

On Sunday, June 15, 2014 7:54:09 PM UTC-4, David E. Ross wrote:
I fear your trees may be doomed. Liriodendron tulipifera requires soil

that drains very well. Being somewhat related to magnolias, it has

delicate, easily damaged surface roots. Your trees likely suffered from

soil that was too wet, and the depositing of eroded debris may have

damaged the vital surface roots.



You might wait until next spring to see if some of the trees recover.

In the meantime, apply a generous amount of gypsum in the "drip zone"

(the area from the trunk to the farthest branches) to improve drainage.

Lightly rinse the gypsum into the soil without making the soil soggy;

this should be a gradual process over 2-3 weeks. Otherwise, DO NOT

FERTILIZE; roots injured by too much water or being buried too deep by

debris will be further traumatized by fertilizer. Also, be very careful

about removing eroded debris; do not disturb the soil underneath but do

remove the debris.



On 6/15/2014 2:25 PM, ElCuartoMago wrote:

Here's youtube link I found. kinda long but that's exactly it.




http://youtu.be/bKSp40_OCuQ




Zone 7b. upstate SC.




I appreciate your time in answering.




Ismael




On Sunday, June 15, 2014 2:39:50 PM UTC-4, David E. Ross wrote:


Two distantly related trees are called "tulip": one is the species




Liriodendron tulipifera and one is the species Magnolia soulangeana.




Poplars are unrelated to either of them, being in the genus Populus and




more closely related to willows. Which do you have?








Also, where are you? That is, what is your climate?








On 6/15/2014 9:19 AM, ElCuartoMago wrote:




I have a wooded area in my back yard which is a "low lying" and wet area. There's a brook/stream that runs across it.








For nearly 20 years, I've had a number of large tulip poplars which have bloomed every year until this year.








Last year, around this time, there was a very large deluge which left a HUGE amount of sand, rocks, etc etc in the yard..... it's been unblocked and redistributed but is still several inches higher than in years past. ground cover hasn't yet grown in over what was the deepest pile of sand/rock.......








As of this July (today) only, of the 5, one has leaves and only scattered in smaller branches up the main trunk.








Will they recover? How long should I expect to wait before I panic?








thanks in advance.
















--




David E. Ross




Climate: California Mediterranean, see




http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html




Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary






--

David E. Ross

Climate: California Mediterranean, see

http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html

Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary