So I tried it and it’s working so far and even tho my pine tree has been through a lot like being attacked by leaf cutter ants and then getting a disease and the new needles aren’t dying finally
There are two types of mulches. Acidic mulches and basic mulches. If that mulch under your pines is more basic your pines will stuggle. The best mulch for uder a pine is pine needles. If lawn can grow under your pine the ground is not acidic enough.
Working on mine as well, I've been using a smoothy of aloe vera (only mature aloes I use. Plants helping plants, I put it in a spray bottle, water at night or early in the morning only. The branch wilt has improved. Also here in visalia the fog has returned a little bit which any form if water is welcomed. These trees love the fog. I'm going to post a video of mine to show the difference.
Spraying conifers for needlecast is dicey. As you can see, you have to wet the entire tree with spray. Eventually, you cant spray most of the tree, nor is drifting that spray onto your neighbor's property legal. Therefore, you end up with a large untreatable tree. In a lot of cases, it makes more sense to remove susceptible conifers before they get too large and replace them with something else. If you're going to spray, at least read the PPE requirements on the label. Monterey clearly says not to inhale the stuff; it's fine if you dont want PPE, but I wouldn't make a public video without disclaiming this.
Copper fungicide must be pretty good, I've seen people use it on tomatoes in their gardens with pretty decent results. First time I've seen them used on trees
I have same problems with my evergreens. When I had my maple cut down in the spring my arborist mentioned I have rhizosphaera needle cast that’s why it’s shedding. So I’ve been testing Spectra 90 WDG, stuff is expensive but I hope I can save them too.
Our pine trees had a pest which built a Caccoon or conical shape type of worm and the needles were eaten by moth or worm. Did not want to spray because of bird nests!
I have a tree that similar to a pine tree, but it’s not and it seems to be dying on the top and all around. Do you have any help that you can give me to hopefully save it I’ll be very thankful.
This particular disease spreads up the tree. So, the tops of my trees were fairly healthy and hopefully stopping it before it makes it up there. If it's throughout the whole tree, then not much you can do outside of own a lift.
I had to cut down 18 of these trees due to similar issue, but willing to save the few that left on my property. Do you have any updates? I would like to give this product a shot next spring.
I would spray right now. The new growth on my trees is established and that's what you have to save. Basically, my understanding is the dead parts of the tree are dead. This stops the spread to the new growth so over time the tree can regrow. I don't really have results exactly as even the arborist said it can take 3-5 years of doing this. What I will say is there are more needles on these trees now than there was last spring/year.
Hi there, I have a ponderosa pine that was treated 3 months ago with mystery injectables for fungus. The company seems slightly shady...I can't see much of a difference, should I attempt to spray now or do you think I should wait until spring?
It is my understanding that doing that now would not do anything. You need to hit the new growth right when it's put on. I was late and only did 1 app this year and am noticing die back again from the progress I had made over the previous 2 years of doing this.
Does the copper treat it or hormones released from the plant? And if so what's a good way to treat them after the stress of releasing that hormone? Thanks
I'm not going to pretend to understand how fungicides work. But it's killing/inhibiting in some manner of fashion the fungus/disease that's causing the needles to fall off. This is why you want to spray the new growth to protect it.
We live in Lake City Michigan pine tree capital of the world and our tree growers use Bravo Weather Stik - We have dozens of assorted pines and the cost of the product you provide would cost thousand dollars per year - Bravo Weather Stik is a fraction and treats the fungicide you speak of - any thoughts?
My big boy is doing this and dominates my front yard. I don't want to cut him down. I want to try this, but have a golden delicious apple tree near by (10 feet or sort). Do you know if this treatment will harm my apple tree? The spray will most definitely mist it.
I read through the label and apple trees are listed as a plant you can treat. However, what I'm not seeing and do not know, is a clear distinction of if that's OK for fruit you will eat. My assumption is yes, but I would strongly strongly encourage you to look that up for yourself and carefully read the label of whatever product you're going to apply.
@edwinperez8406 they were showing signs of recovery. I haven't done it for 2 years now and the ones I treated are still ok. I stopped because I think long term they'll all come down.
Hey I just visited my pine tree and within 2 weeks it lost all of its needles. Can I revive it? Is it dead? Around it, I see wheat. So i think someone poisoned my pine tree and used the land to plant wheat. Plus wheat probably took all of the water & minerals from the land.
@@JasonSeiberlich Do you think I can still revive it? Literally has no needles. Paid $1,000 on Christmas for it and planted it, had no issues up until 2-3 weeks ago. It is 5 meters tall, would be a shame if it were to die :/
I don't know if I'm honest. Reach out to your county's extension office. The arborist I was put in contact with was super nice. Sent them pictures and they told me what to do.
I have two pretty big white pines one on each side of my driveway I do not want to lose so I am ready and willing to try anything. It's winter now so I will wait until spring and try the spray you suggested. I don't know how high I can get with my sprayer but I do have a power sprayer too so we'll see. Have you seen any improvement since you did this in May of 2021? Also, what fertilizers did you try? I have used tree spikes in the past when they were still healthy and it seemed to work well. I even had a specialist come out a few years back when it first started and had them fertilized professionally twice, and did not see an improvement. He said they looked fine as far a any sort of "problem" but it's obvious something is going on. Anyway, thanks for the video. You gave me some hope.
@@JasonSeiberlich Cool...good to hear that. I really do not want to lose my trees. They grew over my driveway and look real nice in front of my house too. Plus I planted them myself some 35+ years ago. Thanks for letting me know.
Wait 3 more questions one: will the disease ever temporarily go away. And two can this disease kill the tree? Three: will the needles that don’t have the disease live?
I'm not an expert on the topic, but my understanding is these types of needle diseases move up the tree from the ground. So, without intervention, it would be my assumption that once a tree is diseased it will slowly spread until it kills the tree. If you really want to make sure you're doing the right thing, reach out to your county or states ag extension. Mine was super helpful.
From what I understand Pines don't like being over watered, they need good drainage and a soil pH of around 5.5. Planting in the wrong sort of soil can cause all types of problems, a sandy clay gets a thumbs up. ✌️❤️🇳🇿
Spruce trees, likely a needlecast disease. If you can't see the rootflare then you are probably spinning your wheels. Austin D. Isa certified Arborist MI-4665A