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Old 08-07-2003, 08:08 AM
gregpresley
 
Posts: n/a
Default Killed a Sourwood

For what it's worth, I think I killed a dogwood tree this summer. This was
its second full year in the ground (planted it in fall of 2000, as I
recall). Though it was quite small, and didn't grow much in its current
location, I thought it was well enough established to exist on the watering
that it gets from a sprinkler system (15 minutes , 3 X week, 3/4 shade
environment). Add one hot late June/early July weekend of steady dry winds,
and every leaf turned into a pale green cornflake........ There's
still some pliability to the trunk and some branches, so I'm not going to
yank it out until I see whether it leafs out next spring - but I'm not
optimistic........
"dementia13" wrote in message
...
Hi, all. I planted a Sourwood in April, and it did well through June,
when it went into a rapid decline. It's still under warranty from the
nursery, but before I get it replaced I want to make sure the same thing
doesn't happen to the replacement. (And before you say "Google", it
didn't help). Here's the detailed timeline:
Early April: purchased 8' tree, set it into ground in what was to be a
raised bed; but couldn't be completed because the tiller broke down.
Mounded soil (mixture of native heavy clay, topsoil, peat, and manure)
to height the bed would be and planted. Stupidly, planted tree in wrong
spot and had to move it 2 feet over a couple of weeks later. Tree
healthy, plenty of new growth. A Sweet Bay Magnolia was planted at the
same time; it has remained completely healthy.
Early May: Tornadoes hit; top 18" broken off of tree but no other damage.
Blooms begin to form shortly after.
Early June: Fill in rest of bed. Because the tree was planted in mounded
soil, no additional dirt was placed over roots. Same soil mixture. Added
an ounce of Azalea-Rhododendron fertilizer (because Sourwood is in the
same family) and a small amount of aluminum sulfate; worked these in the
soil with some manure.
Mid-June: Tree in full bloom, but leaves starting to look transparent
and taking on fall color. Coincides with summer heat arriving.
Late June: Leaves dry up. They have not fallen yet, but are orange and
bone-dry.
Should I not have added fertilizer or aluminum sulfate, even in the
conservative amounts that I did? Could my cats have overfertilized the
tree? Could the tree have been stressed from the tornado, and not been
able to handle the additional stress of summer heat? It's planted in
full sun, in Zone 7, with good drainage. (I'm one county outside this
tree's natural range). This tree was at the nursery a year ago, so this
climate is not strange to it.