GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Edible Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/)
-   -   QUEEN COX dwarf apple - limbs dieing (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/edible-gardening/95581-queen-cox-dwarf-apple-limbs-dieing.html)

[email protected] 09-06-2005 12:18 AM

QUEEN COX dwarf apple - limbs dieing
 
I have a 3 yr old dwarf apple from Raintree Nursery growing in Zone 7
(Atlanta). The tree has branched out nicely and is producing apples
this year. I have been undergoing CHEMO since Jan-05 and have been
unable to take care of my fruit trees. I noticed from the car the apple
tree has several branches that are dieing from the tip back to the
trunk. As the branch dies, the apples fall off. They are about the size
of small crabapples at this point. Anyone have any idea of what might
be happening and what I can do to resolve the issue. The Dr.'s believe
my leukemia is pesticide related. I prefer not to use pesticides since
my wife will have to perform the task.


STEPHEN PEEK 09-06-2005 05:03 AM

It could be fire blight. I have it in both apples & pears.
Steve
" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a 3 yr old dwarf apple from Raintree Nursery growing in Zone 7
(Atlanta). The tree has branched out nicely and is producing apples
this year. I have been undergoing CHEMO since Jan-05 and have been
unable to take care of my fruit trees. I noticed from the car the apple
tree has several branches that are dieing from the tip back to the
trunk. As the branch dies, the apples fall off. They are about the size
of small crabapples at this point. Anyone have any idea of what might
be happening and what I can do to resolve the issue. The Dr.'s believe
my leukemia is pesticide related. I prefer not to use pesticides since
my wife will have to perform the task.




sherwindu 11-06-2005 07:04 AM

Hi Stephen,

Sorry to hear about your illness. When you sprayed in the past, did you
wear protective gear, including a breathing mask?

My Cox's Orange Pippen is a semi-dwarf tree I have had for almost 20 years.
Last season and this, it has shown signs of distress like late blossoming, discolored
and fewer leaves. It seems to be affecting the entire tree uniformly, which is not
exactly your case. From what I understand about Fire Blight is that you should be
seeing cankers, especially just below the graft. You don't mention this, so it may
not be that disease. I haven't figured out yet what's distressing my Cox, but I am
hoping it will eventually recover. Your tree is much younger, so it should have a
better chance of recovery. If your problem is bacterial related, there are certain
treatments of streptomycin sprays, which may help. I would recommend taking
one of these affected branches to your closest botanical garden or university
extension service to pin down the problem.

Sherwin D.

STEPHEN PEEK wrote:

It could be fire blight. I have it in both apples & pears.
Steve
" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a 3 yr old dwarf apple from Raintree Nursery growing in Zone 7
(Atlanta). The tree has branched out nicely and is producing apples
this year. I have been undergoing CHEMO since Jan-05 and have been
unable to take care of my fruit trees. I noticed from the car the apple
tree has several branches that are dieing from the tip back to the
trunk. As the branch dies, the apples fall off. They are about the size
of small crabapples at this point. Anyone have any idea of what might
be happening and what I can do to resolve the issue. The Dr.'s believe
my leukemia is pesticide related. I prefer not to use pesticides since
my wife will have to perform the task.




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:47 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter