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kingme77_gw

Cherry Trees - Yellow Leaves

kingme77
13 years ago

Hello, I am new to the tree and gardening seen. My wife and I moved into our first house two years ago. We have a decent sized back yard that gets lots of sun. The yard however had no trees. I decided this Spring to plant some trees, which I did. Of the five trees I planted three were Okame Cherry Trees. The trees are young, only 4 to 5 feet tall. I have never planted a tree until now. I surprisingly enjoyed planting them and love to walk around the yard to see how they're doing.

The trees were doing fine until today when I came home and found yellow brittle leaves on two of the trees. Some of the green leaves have black tips on them. I did recently spray them with an insecticide, because I found a couple Japanese Beatles on them. (The brand was Bayer if that helps.) Not sure if that makes a difference.

I did some research before buying/planting. I dug a hole twice as big as the root ball, scraped the walls of the sides of the hole, and did not go deeper then the root ball. I did use peet moss and some granulated fertilizer on the surface of the dirt. Then covered with mulch, trying not to get to close to the trunk. I try to keep them watered but we have had a bit of rain recently. So I have been letting Mother Nature water them for me. The trees are about 25 feet apart, and are on the high part of my yard. They get plenty of sun.

If there is anything I can do to help them or if you need anymore information please let me know. I appreciate any responses. Sorry for the lengthy post. I have included some pictures below.

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Comments (7)

  • IanW Zone 5 Ont. Can.
    13 years ago

    It is normal for a newly planted tree to shed some leaves while it becomes established......but I will caution you about relying on mother nature and the water this tree needs.......The tree is living from its root ball at the moment and if that drys out, the leaves will fold and scorch....rain from the sky may not be enough moisture for the tree......In other words, I would be hand watering this tree through the summer.....

    Ian

  • Dan _Staley (5b Sunset 2B AHS 7)
    13 years ago

    Maybe it is reacting to the harmful staking job?

    Dan

  • gardener365
    13 years ago

    Get used to it with all fruit trees. You're going to have yellow leaves and leaf drop for the remainder of their lives.

    That staking job is terrible. I doubt it even needs staking as it's large enough of a tree.

    Dax

  • ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5
    13 years ago

    here you go ....

    snip off all the stuff below the rope ....

    then get rid of the stakes ... trees are supposed to blow in the wind.. and those arent big enough to worry about ..

    then kill all the grass in a 3 foot circle ...

    then dig down with a hand trowel.. and see if the soil in the root zone is actually moist ....

    then add 2 to 3 inches of mulch ....

    and then.. quit trying to kill these plants with too much love...

    if you sprayed during the heat of the day.. you may have hurt the leaves.. if not just the chems themselves ...

    otherwise.. as noted .... your recent transplants may not have the root mass to support all the canopy ... so they shed some leaves [which is why dont mind snipping off all those low small branchlets] .. i would start to worry if 80% of the leaves were browning ... if you are worrying about the 2 leaves shown in the pic.. see above about loving it to death ....

    my guess.. without the benefit of the hand trowel in your yard .. is that they are not getting enough water down in the root zone .. now that the real heat of summer has hit ....

    PROPER WATERING IS ALL THEY SHOULD NEED for 2 years .. no food.. no fert.. no chems.. and no college fund.. they are trees.. not children.. lol ...

    proper watering involves deep infrequent water that goes deep into the root zone.. and proper mulch.. and then not watering again.. until the soil under the mulch is either dry or hot.. hot damp soil will be dry in a day or two.. and the mulch is meant to cool the soil, among other things. ....

    good luck

    ken

    PS: BTW.. i have 60 foot serrotina.. furniture cherry ... and they shed leaves all season long.. just like yours... go figure .... its the nature of the beast on some level ....

  • kingme77
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    So the trees are in no danger of dieing? I have been watering them, but just recently we have been getting a lot of rain and I wasn't sure if I would be over watering. Its hard to tell (for me anyways) if the tree is getting to much or to little water.

    And as far as the staking job please let me know what I did wrong so I can fix it. You guys are freaking me out now. I want the trees to have the best and healthiest chance possible. As I said I have never done this before. The guy from the nursery said those stakes would be fine, but I am not opposed to changing it. I was told to leave enough room for the tree to sway so as they dont rely on the stakes. And if they dont need the stakes let me know and I'll remove them. I am on a higher area and we do get some serious wind sometimes.

    Thanks to all that have responded, it is really appreciated.

  • kingme77
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Ken,
    thank you for that message. I will try to loosen my grip. I guess they're not as fragile as I thought. I will follow your instructions when I get home from work. Oh, and I made sure to spray in the evening.

    Thanks for all the responses, if anything you have set me at ease.
    I will try to stop "killing them with to much love".... great line.

  • ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5
    13 years ago

    super...

    last pic.. soil looks pretty dry at the surface.. gently dig in there.. and find out how dry it is down where the roots are ...

    when you start to get concerned.. focus only at the growth tips... if they look good .. great... if they start drooping.. then there might be a problem ...

    ken