GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/)
-   -   Maple Tree dead??? (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/182433-maple-tree-dead.html)

geoff1132204 08-04-2009 04:58 PM

Maple Tree dead???
 
Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say, my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G

[email protected] 08-04-2009 09:36 PM

Maple Tree dead???
 
On Wed, 8 Apr 2009 16:58:34 +0100, geoff1132204
wrote:


Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G


Here in middle TN, the maples are just now waking up. Sounds like you
have a red maple. I just planted one on Sunday. I adore red maples.
Hope yours wakes up.

Kate

Phisherman[_3_] 09-04-2009 12:31 AM

Maple Tree dead???
 
On Wed, 8 Apr 2009 16:58:34 +0100, geoff1132204
wrote:


Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G



If most of maple trees have leafed out and your maple has not, changes
are good that it is indeed dead. To see if a young branch is dead
scrape the bark with your fingernail--if you do not see any green
under the bark, the branch is dead.

cardarch 09-04-2009 01:19 AM

Maple Tree dead???
 
On Apr 8, 11:58*am, geoff1132204
wrote:
Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G

--
geoff1132204


You might tell us where you live.

[email protected] 10-04-2009 04:03 PM

Maple Tree dead???
 
it could be a Japanese maple and they are slow to put out their leaves. as somebody
pointed out if you scrape just a bit of a twig and look for green that will be one
good indication. however, Japanese maples are VERY DIFFICULT and usually like a
protected place to be planted. they need even moisture because they have very
shallow roots, but never have their feet in standing water, they dont like full
blaring summer sun, like a partial shade and protection from wind.

Ingrid

On Wed, 8 Apr 2009 16:58:34 +0100, geoff1132204
wrote:
a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory.


Dioclese 11-04-2009 12:45 AM

Maple Tree dead???
 
"geoff1132204" wrote in message
...

Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G




--
geoff1132204


Kinda reminds me of the Pecans I have here. 2 different pecan species, 2
different trees on the property I planted a couple of years ago.
Everything, including the local trees took off and budded and leafed out.
Like the previous year, the pecans just sat there, void of any sign of life.
The last couple of weeks, the pecans have taken off, as like last year.
Leaves abound, especially the paper pecan version.

I would:
Be very patient.
Verify from many other sources of the variety of tree you're talking about.
Consider the recent past and present weather/temperature and your location
in regards to those trees.
Avoid any advice from any arborist that you cannot verify their credentials.
--
Dave
If you don't like the weather in Central Texas (USA), just give it a
minute...



geoff1132204 13-04-2009 01:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dioclese (Post 838166)
"geoff1132204" wrote in message
...

Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G




--
geoff1132204


Kinda reminds me of the Pecans I have here. 2 different pecan species, 2
different trees on the property I planted a couple of years ago.
Everything, including the local trees took off and budded and leafed out.
Like the previous year, the pecans just sat there, void of any sign of life.
The last couple of weeks, the pecans have taken off, as like last year.
Leaves abound, especially the paper pecan version.

I would:
Be very patient.
Verify from many other sources of the variety of tree you're talking about.
Consider the recent past and present weather/temperature and your location
in regards to those trees.
Avoid any advice from any arborist that you cannot verify their credentials.
--
Dave
If you don't like the weather in Central Texas (USA), just give it a
minute...


Thanks all for your replies. I live in Staffordshire, England. Still no sign off life from the tree. Does anyone still think it might be too early????

geoff1132204 13-04-2009 01:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dioclese (Post 838166)
"geoff1132204" wrote in message
...

Hi all,

I am a VERY inexperienced gardener, in fact, it would be safe to say,
my hands have never planted a bulb! The extent of my endeavors has been
to drag the mower back and forth occasionally when the missus gets her
gardening head on (shes the green fingered one). Last year we moved
into our new house, and there was a very pretty little tree in our
garden, about 2-3 foot high, that had bright red leaves. I was told, by
someone who supposedly knows their stuff, that this was a young maple.

I seem to remember that it grew these pretty red leaves very early in
the year, but that could just be my poor memory. The thing is, this
year, there is nothing at all so far. I cant even see what look like
the beginnings of leaves, or buds.

In fact, the whole tree looks rather dead to my very ungreen eyes, and
my missus is all for yanking it up. I'd like to give it a chance yet.

What time of year should maples start to show their leaves? and how can
I tell if this tree has died? If it has, I want to replace it with
exactly the same before too much more time passes.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks....
G




--
geoff1132204


Kinda reminds me of the Pecans I have here. 2 different pecan species, 2
different trees on the property I planted a couple of years ago.
Everything, including the local trees took off and budded and leafed out.
Like the previous year, the pecans just sat there, void of any sign of life.
The last couple of weeks, the pecans have taken off, as like last year.
Leaves abound, especially the paper pecan version.

I would:
Be very patient.
Verify from many other sources of the variety of tree you're talking about.
Consider the recent past and present weather/temperature and your location
in regards to those trees.
Avoid any advice from any arborist that you cannot verify their credentials.
--
Dave
If you don't like the weather in Central Texas (USA), just give it a
minute...



Many Thanks for all your replies. I live in Staffordshire, England. Does anybody still think its too early to be digging it up? or should I be waiting longer, there is still no sign of life.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:20 PM.

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