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Japanese Flowering Cherry
4 Answers
We've only been here 4 years but in the garden there is (was) the most gorgeous spring flowering cherry tree (non fruiting), pure white thick blossom with a hint of pink. Our neighbour said its been there nearly 20 years.
This year it is dead, no leaves no blossom, we pulled a twig from it and broke it & its just dry & dusty, we also notice on the trunk it has several knotty growths. IS there anything we can do or do we conclude its dead but what has happened to it, why has it just died?
Anyone know about these things out there? Thanks
Jem
This year it is dead, no leaves no blossom, we pulled a twig from it and broke it & its just dry & dusty, we also notice on the trunk it has several knotty growths. IS there anything we can do or do we conclude its dead but what has happened to it, why has it just died?
Anyone know about these things out there? Thanks
Jem
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Jemisa. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.They are fairly short-lived but I suggest what my local garden centre said about my olive tree; olives can live over a thousand years, this one is only thirty; which is to give it a feed and wait another year. They said that trees do come back from apparent death, so you never know. Certainly, a eucalypt here looked dead but, amazingly, slowly but steadily has come back to life over ensuing years.
Look at the bark very carefully. Are there any little reddish-pink lumps - a bit like little drops of bright nail-varnish ? If so, it could be coral-spot, which does kill trees like cherry, and is very dangerous to other trees. If you see these little spots you must destroy the tree - consult the local council's trees/parks department.
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