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Ouch! That hurts!! |
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Visually and for the poor tree. I just want to stop at these houses and ask them "what were you thinking?" Tree Topping aka "Tree Amputation" Why it’s bad….. Does NOT keep the tree small…. After topping, the growth actually increases to replace missing leaf area it needs to "feed" itself. The trunk and roots have not been reduced, only the leaf area that supports the whole system. This dramatically reduces lifespan of the tree. Repeated removal of the leaf canopy slowly starves the tree. It’s UGLY….The sight of a topped tree is offensive to many people. The stubbed branches followed by a broom of ugly straight suckers and shoots – what an eyesore! 25 years of beautiful growth can be destroyed in a few hours. It’s EXPENSIVE.....Guys in trees with chainsaws ain’t cheap It’s DANGEROUS….Severe and/or repeated topping will create columns of rotting wood within the tree. Heavy winds or snowstorms can snap large limbs right off. The thick regrowth of sprouts make the tree top heavy, increasing chance of it blowing over in a storm. Weakly attached sprouts break off easily. Ironically, people top their trees because they believe it makes them safer. Trees are a huge community asset! Choose, plant and care for them well! information gathered from www.plantamnesty.org So how do you avoid this scenario all together? It all starts when you choose a tree. Be sure to know how big the tree gets- just as we stopped growing when we hit our genetic capacity, trees have expected sizes too. Look up- are their power lines above? Don’t plant too close to the house. If you have existing trees with branches precariously hanging over the house or power lines, get an expert tree pruner (arborist) who will selectively prune- keeping the health and longevity of the tree in mind along with the homeowner’s needs. It is one of the saddest things I see- a majestic tree reduced to a trunk with some stubs and a few leaves hanging here and there. The tree standing in shame.... Have you planted your tree yet? Did you pick the best choice for the spot? Ask for our $15 coupon off any tree over $75 (while promotion lasts...) Hug a tree! ~Erica |
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Last Updated on Monday, 03 May 2010 11:06 |
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Yikes! What is that lurking in my garden?!?! |
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From our primal depths? Our collective un-awareness? For some reason, if there is something crawling or unfamiliar to us in the garden, we quickly assess that it is bad and make moves to kill it. How many bugs have you squished-or worse-sprayed with "something from the shed"- in the garden because they "were probably bad". Just because it is an insect does not make it bad. The black beetles you find under leaf litter in your garden may very well be ground beetles- who find slugs quite delicious. A lady bug larvae barely resembles a lady bug, but eats twice as many aphids. We had a person once who came in and had mis-identified them as Box Elder Bugs (another completely harmless, albeit en mass kind of bug) and sprayed them all down with Sevin (bad, bad, bad!!), killing a whole generation of insect eating machines. Ever see a tomato hornworm being an incubating tank for beneficial parasitic wasps? Gross and cool at the same time. The parasitic wasps lay their eggs on the back of the hornworm (larvae of the hummingbird moth that seem to be able to eat ½ of a large tomato plant in a single evening). The wasp larvae then eat the hornworm to death. Problem handled by Mother Nature. No help needed from us or our nasty chemical interferences. Know your enemy! Then use the absolute least amount force to deal with it. Which might very well be the decision to do nothing at all but observe. Surprisingly, Mother Nature might have it all figured out, balanced...... One of the "problems" I have seen a few times this week is samples of Lichens. This is a super cool algae/fungus organism that grows on old tree trunks (especially Dogwood), rocks and well, all over the place if the conditions are right. National Geographic did a very extensive article about them years ago-they are so beautiful! Wikipedia has a fabulous picture of them. So in comes my customer with a scraped off lichens wanting something to kill them because ‘obviously’ they are killing her tree. They aren’t. Lichens are just there growing because the culture they need exist on that tree trunk. Sort of like moss. Moss isn’t hurting anything either- I swear it causes me pain when someone wants to buy something to kill the moss growing in their back yard, in the shade, in the moist soil, where they can’t get grass to grow......as if it is the moss’s fault that grass is a plant too. Be aware, be an observer, interfere only after you have identified and decided your level of tolerance. Let your garden be a garden for all who live there. Bugs, birds, dandelions, you. Don’t kill things that don’t need to be dead. ~Erica |
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Last Updated on Sunday, 02 May 2010 07:53 |
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Punk Rock Gardens
Punk Rock Gardens is a Community Garden Blog. We dig up stories about gardening and propagate helpful tips about growing in Pennsylvania. We’ll share a crop of cool plant related happenings and introduce you to local gardeners who rock.
Check Out Our Favs
OK, here is a list of my favorite landscape plants, although I am sure I will forget some, as I love so many. Also, different plants are approprite for different sites, further making this a harder list for me to compile. Learn more...
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