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2012 Green Thumb Awards
Five new plant varieties and five new gardening products have won 2012 Green Thumb Awards presented by the Direct Gardening Association (formerly the Mailorder Gardening Association). The Green Thumb Awards have been going on for 15 years, and …Read more.
Is Your Cold Hardiness Map Useful?
Last week, we looked at the new U.S. Department of Agriculture hardiness zone map and the fact that it does not prove global warming. Using 30 years of one measure of weather to create a map for gardeners while ignoring all of the other weather …Read more.
Stop The Presses! The Headlines are Wrong!
Have you heard that the United States Department of Agriculture has released a new plant hardiness zone map for the United States? You may have heard that this map indicates global climate warming.
Does the new USDA map offer proof that the climate …Read more.
Transporting Trees: No Easy Feat But Well Worth the Effort
Q: I have nine dwarf fruit trees (including apple, peach, pear and plum). I will be moving this coming spring or early summer. These trees have been on my property from one to four years. Some have produced fruit, and some have not. Is it possible …Read more.
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Tree Damage from MammalsQ: We live on a lake and have never had a problem with beavers before, but one has attacked a 2.5-foot diameter ash tree on our property. It ate some of the bark down to the wood on two sides of the tree, leaving two sides untouched. What can we do to protect the tree and help it recover?
A: Beavers have been spreading across the country as rivers and streams have become cleaner. They don't always build a dam. When the young leave home and travel to new places, they first seek protection by burrowing into the bank. They can do a lot of damage by creating large holes in banks of levees and earthen dams. The damage may not be noticed on a retention or detention pond until rains fill it. On large rivers, they don't build dams because of too much flow. They still can cause erosion damage because they burrow under shoreline tree roots, undermining the tree, which falls into the river ripping out more roots and soil. Beavers usually attack small trees because the bark is thinner. The small tree falls over and more tasty small twigs are available to eat. It takes a lot of work to cut down a large tree to get to the small branches, and in the meantime there is nothing to eat. Your lake shore probably has few small trees to eat. The first thing to do is wrap the trunk in wire mesh. The smaller the holes the better. Large holes can allow the beaver to get its teeth through and nibble. The fencing needs to be attached to stakes to hold it in place.
The first thing that needs to be done for the tree is to use a sharp knife and clean up the loose ends of the wounded bark. Then, wrap the tree in burlap or tree wrap paper for the winter to protect the wounded area from extreme temperature fluctuations. Take off the wrap in the spring, so that insects and decay organisms aren't able to hide behind it. Don't spray the tree or paint it. These products harm the existing good cells that need to heal and also can hide decay organisms from view. For the rest of us who don't have large animals eating our trees, we need to be on the lookout for the much more common damage caused by small critters like mice and voles. They eat the trunks of trees in the winter, but they are short, so the damage is going to be low to the ground. The damage might be hidden by mulch, leaves or ground cover vines. Keep these critters away from tree trunks. Mice eat young trees because the bark is thin; they especially like eating the bark of newly planted fruit trees. When they eat all the way around a tree trunk, the tree will die. The best prevention is to install a wire barrier with small holes. It doesn't have to be quite as strong as before, since mice don't weigh quite as much as beavers. As the trees mature, the thicker bark helps prevent damage from small mammals. E-mail questions to Jeff Rugg, University of Illinois Extension at jrugg@illinois.edu. To find out more about Jeff Rugg and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM ![]()
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