Revitalising strangled fruit tree
I confess it, I strangled a fruit tree by tying it to its post with some nylon string and forgetting about it. When I remembered, this spring, the string was embedded into the tree. In fact it was so deeply embedded I couldn't get it all out. This presumably explains why the tree has been rather lacking in vigour the last three years or so. (I strangled another tree in the same manner, but it didn't get so deeply embedded, and it is looking pretty well now I have released it.) I have seen trees looking perfectly well with barbed wire fences passing through them - in these cases does the cambium when it obtains contact the far side of an obstruction it meets?
Will the tree manage to heal this strangulation and reinvigorate - it isn't noticeably more vigorous yet? I notice that the tree has sent out a few new shoots from below the strangulation. The lower trunk is heavily shaded so they aren't wondrously vigorous at the moment. Should I encourage them and aim to remove the rest of the tree above the strangulation over the next few years? If it matters, it is a real quince, Cydonia oblonga (no, not a Japanese quince). |
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How low is the strangulation? You'll do well to get a trunk from the lower growth, and I'd have thought you'd set back the tree several years. It's a shame, but you might be better to cut your losses and replace - it might be the quickest way to get as far as quinces. |
Revitalising strangled fruit tree
On Sep 2, 11:12*am, echinosum
wrote: I confess it, I strangled a fruit tree by tying it to its post with some nylon string and forgetting about it. *When I remembered, this spring, the string was embedded into the tree. *In fact it was so deeply embedded I couldn't get it all out. *This presumably explains why the tree has been rather lacking in vigour the last three years or so. (I strangled another tree in the same manner, but it didn't get so deeply embedded, and it is looking pretty well now I have released it.) *I have seen trees looking perfectly well with barbed wire fences passing through them - in these cases does the cambium when it obtains contact the far side of an obstruction it meets? Will the tree manage to heal this strangulation and reinvigorate - it isn't noticeably more vigorous yet? I notice that the tree has sent out a few new shoots from below the strangulation. The lower trunk is heavily shaded so they aren't wondrously vigorous at the moment. *Should I encourage them and aim to remove the rest of the tree above the strangulation over the next few years? If it matters, it is a real quince, Cydonia oblonga (no, not a Japanese quince). -- echinosum Probably it will die. Another thing happened to me similar. Ileft the brown twirl rabbit guard things on several trees and as they grew they strangled the trees. Completely dead. They were in long grass & hence didn't rot in the sun and fall off as they usually do. |
Revitalising strangled fruit tree
When I was a Local Councillor, I was one of those returning an area to a
Football Ground http://www.myalbum.com/Album-Y38TI8T...-of-Other.html :-(( The tree was removed. -- .................................... Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive. .................................... "Jake" Nospam@invalid wrote in message ... On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 18:23:01 +0100, Chris Hogg wrote: On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 10:12:25 +0000, echinosum wrote: I confess it, I strangled a fruit tree by tying it to its post with some nylon string and forgetting about it. When I remembered, this spring, the string was embedded into the tree. In fact it was so deeply embedded I couldn't get it all out. This presumably explains why the tree has been rather lacking in vigour the last three years or so. (I strangled another tree in the same manner, but it didn't get so deeply embedded, and it is looking pretty well now I have released it.) I have seen trees looking perfectly well with barbed wire fences passing through them - in these cases does the cambium when it obtains contact the far side of an obstruction it meets? Will the tree manage to heal this strangulation and reinvigorate - it isn't noticeably more vigorous yet? I notice that the tree has sent out a few new shoots from below the strangulation. The lower trunk is heavily shaded so they aren't wondrously vigorous at the moment. Should I encourage them and aim to remove the rest of the tree above the strangulation over the next few years? If it matters, it is a real quince, Cydonia oblonga (no, not a Japanese quince). Dunno about fruit trees, but when we bought this place there was a leylandii hedge, the trees of which had been tied to stakes by nylon rope at some time in the past. On one tree, the rope was deeply cut into the trunk. Rather to my surprise, the trunk below the strangle was about half the thickness of the trunk above it. The tree itself was growing tolerably well, if a little less vigorously that its fellows. I asked here as to why that should be. Can't remember the reply in detail, but it was something along the lines of nutrients moving up the tree through the core of the trunk, which wasn't strangled, while growth hormones moved down through the cambium layer, which was strangled (I may have that the wrong way round, but I don't think so). Hence the trunk above the strangle grew OK, but below it, it didn't. I assume that includes the roots, and eventually it would have been unable to support itself. Whether that's of any relevance or help, I leave you to decide, but I suspect your tree will survive without much trouble. I once had to arrange for the unfortunate removal of a very large and very healthy tree to make way for an office extension. The contractors gradually got it down to a six foot bit of central trunk and then applied the chainsaw to the bottom of that. Suddenly the saw and the chap using it jumped a few feet. On closer examination, we discovered that when originally planted, a substantial metal tree guard had been put in around it. That guard was entirely inside the tree, The trunk was about 2 feet across; the tree guard less than half of that! Cheers Jake ============================================== Gardening at the dry end (east) of Swansea Bay in between reading anything by JRR Tolkien. www.rivendell.org.uk |
Revitalising strangled fruit tree
On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 18:44:00 +0100, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote:
On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 18:23:01 +0100, Chris Hogg wrote: On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 10:12:25 +0000, echinosum wrote: I confess it, I strangled a fruit tree by tying it to its post with some nylon string and forgetting about it. When I remembered, this spring, the string was embedded into the tree. In fact it was so deeply embedded I couldn't get it all out. This presumably explains why the tree has been rather lacking in vigour the last three years or so. (I strangled another tree in the same manner, but it didn't get so deeply embedded, and it is looking pretty well now I have released it.) I have seen trees looking perfectly well with barbed wire fences passing through them - in these cases does the cambium when it obtains contact the far side of an obstruction it meets? Will the tree manage to heal this strangulation and reinvigorate - it isn't noticeably more vigorous yet? I notice that the tree has sent out a few new shoots from below the strangulation. The lower trunk is heavily shaded so they aren't wondrously vigorous at the moment. Should I encourage them and aim to remove the rest of the tree above the strangulation over the next few years? If it matters, it is a real quince, Cydonia oblonga (no, not a Japanese quince). Dunno about fruit trees, but when we bought this place there was a leylandii hedge, the trees of which had been tied to stakes by nylon rope at some time in the past. On one tree, the rope was deeply cut into the trunk. Rather to my surprise, the trunk below the strangle was about half the thickness of the trunk above it. The tree itself was growing tolerably well, if a little less vigorously that its fellows. I asked here as to why that should be. Can't remember the reply in detail, but it was something along the lines of nutrients moving up the tree through the core of the trunk, which wasn't strangled, while growth hormones moved down through the cambium layer, which was strangled (I may have that the wrong way round, but I don't think so). Hence the trunk above the strangle grew OK, but below it, it didn't. I assume that includes the roots, and eventually it would have been unable to support itself. Whether that's of any relevance or help, I leave you to decide, but I suspect your tree will survive without much trouble. I think I'd probably make two or three vertical incisions with a Stanley knife to cut through the cord below the bark. That would let the tree expand as the years go by, and probably do no harm now. I once had to arrange for the unfortunate removal of a very large and very healthy tree to make way for an office extension. The contractors gradually got it down to a six foot bit of central trunk and then applied the chainsaw to the bottom of that. Suddenly the saw and the chap using it jumped a few feet. On closer examination, we discovered that when originally planted, a substantial metal tree guard had been put in around it. That guard was entirely inside the tree, The trunk was about 2 feet across; the tree guard less than half of that! My grandfather tried to sell some trees on their property to the local timber merchant (this was in Aus, and before the war) who refused on the grounds that as kids he and others had hammered nails into them. My mother never told me if or how the deal progressed after that. I've read of serious trouble with timber in the north of France: embedded bullets and splinters from the First WW sometimes connect with the circular saws. -- Mike. |
Revitalising strangled fruit tree
On Sep 2, 8:24*pm, Mike Lyle wrote:
On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 18:44:00 +0100, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote: On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 18:23:01 +0100, Chris Hogg wrote: On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 10:12:25 +0000, echinosum wrote: I confess it, I strangled a fruit tree by tying it to its post with some nylon string and forgetting about it. *When I remembered, this spring, the string was embedded into the tree. *In fact it was so deeply embedded I couldn't get it all out. *This presumably explains why the tree has been rather lacking in vigour the last three years or so. (I strangled another tree in the same manner, but it didn't get so deeply embedded, and it is looking pretty well now I have released it.) *I have seen trees looking perfectly well with barbed wire fences passing through them - in these cases does the cambium when it obtains contact the far side of an obstruction it meets? Will the tree manage to heal this strangulation and reinvigorate - it isn't noticeably more vigorous yet? I notice that the tree has sent out a few new shoots from below the strangulation. The lower trunk is heavily shaded so they aren't wondrously vigorous at the moment. *Should I encourage them and aim to remove the rest of the tree above the strangulation over the next few years? If it matters, it is a real quince, Cydonia oblonga (no, not a Japanese quince). Dunno about fruit trees, but when we bought this place there was a leylandii hedge, the trees of which had been tied to stakes by nylon rope at some time in the past. On one tree, the rope was deeply cut into the trunk. Rather to my surprise, the trunk below the strangle was about half the thickness of the trunk above it. The tree itself was growing tolerably well, if a little less vigorously that its fellows. I asked here as to why that should be. Can't remember the reply in detail, but it was something along the lines of nutrients moving up the tree through the core of the trunk, which wasn't strangled, while growth hormones moved down through the cambium layer, which was strangled (I may have that the wrong way round, but I don't think so). Hence the trunk above the strangle grew OK, but below it, it didn't. I assume that includes the roots, and eventually it would have been unable to support itself. Whether that's of any relevance or help, I leave you to decide, but I suspect your tree will survive without much trouble. I think I'd probably make two or three vertical incisions with *a Stanley knife to cut through the cord below the bark. That would let the tree expand as the years go by, and probably do no harm now. I once had to arrange for the unfortunate removal of a very large and very healthy tree to make way for an office extension. The contractors gradually got it down to a six foot bit of central trunk and then applied the chainsaw to the bottom of that. Suddenly the saw and the chap using it jumped a few feet. On closer examination, we discovered that when originally planted, a substantial metal tree guard had been put in around it. That guard was entirely inside the tree, The trunk was about 2 feet across; the tree guard less than half of that! My grandfather tried to sell some trees on their property to the local timber merchant (this was in Aus, and before the war) who refused on the grounds that as kids he and others had hammered nails into them. My mother never told me if or how the deal progressed after that. I've read of serious trouble with timber in the north of France: embedded bullets and splinters from the First WW sometimes connect with the circular saws. -- Mike.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Major problem with West Russian timber. There are metal detectors attached to the timber mills to warn against shrapnell from WW2 |
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It now occurs to me that I could simply reduce the crown above the strangle without removing it, to a size the strangled trunk can more easily feed, at least for now, in case it doesn't fully recover. And some of the new shoots can add additional growth. The new shoots are about 2 ft above the ground. |
Revitalising strangled fruit tree
On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 09:08:08 +0000, echinosum
wrote: harry;935074 Wrote: Probably it will die. I have little doubt it won't. The strangle has been mostly relieved, and it has been alive but lacking vigour for a few years. The question is whether it will regain its vigour, of its own accord, or whether I should encourage some shoots from below the strangle. It now occurs to me that I could simply reduce the crown above the strangle without removing it, to a size the strangled trunk can more easily feed, at least for now, in case it doesn't fully recover. And some of the new shoots can add additional growth. The new shoots are about 2 ft above the ground. I've been thinking - in an earlier post in this thread I mentioned a tree that had grown out around a heavy tree guard (not wire mesh - this was metal fence standard!). If all that you were using was nylon string, the cut can't be that wide and the tree can't be that big - even nylon will break under too much strain. Might it be possible to just pull the top of the tree over enough with some ropes to press the edges of the cut together and then tape over as if grafting? Then just leave in place for a while (don't ask how long) and with luck the tree will heal itself. Just a thought. Cheers Jake ============================================== Gardening at the dry end (east) of Swansea Bay in between reading anything by JRR Tolkien. www.rivendell.org.uk |
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