As everybody know, we have the worst summer in Texas since 50 years. Every plant is stressed. We have a hedge of 10 Leyland Cypresses , they are meanwhile around 7 feet high but start getting brownish at some parts of the tree. I'm reading different suggestions about watering now. Some gardener experts say ,only water once a week, even in a drought and others say keep it even moist. I'm aware of standing water or overwatering that this will cause problems. We just have given them new mulch and we laid out a soaker hose, but we are just not sure , if we are supposed to use it every day and for how many minutes/hours? I'd be grateful about every hint you could give me!
Thank you!
Leyland Cypresses die back
Sorry ~ I don't know the amount of water flow through the soaker hoses but will say if you will water, water thoroughly. Shallow watering develops shallow surface roots which the Cypresses will become dependent for moisture.
Deep watering, less often will be more fulfilling for your trees.
I suspect the mulch will be a good asset in helping them retain moisture also. Good luck!
Thank you very much! Since they get some extra water, I imagine they are doing much better. Now I just pray that they recover in the late fall.
I'm afraid of what the freezing temps will do to already stressed trees.
Thanks LouC for the encouragement:-)
sorry, that was a bad thing to say. I'm just worried and my optimism is draining away.
Truly am sorry. Time to keep my comments to myself.
no ! Don't take it that serious! I'm just kidding! Thank you for giving your comment, at the end you are right! Have a great day!
Aftermath of the Drought - Neil Sperry's GARDENS
One Nellie R. Stevens holly in row has been lost, probably due to competition from tree’s roots.
I've begun each of my radio programs these past several weeks with the request, "If your question begins, 'Neil, my plants' leaves are all brown. Are they still alive?' there is probably a 99 percent chance that you've let them get too dry at least one time in the past two or three months." I've gone on to say, "There really isn't much reason for you to call, because that's probably all I'll be able to tell you anyway. Plus, it would make for three hours of repetitive radio."
But, let's address some of those issues here and now:
Native Trees
Large native trees in wooded areas of the eastern half of Texas have been browning for the past several weeks. That's been their natural way of coping with the hot, dry conditions. I've been gardening in Texas, with six years' exception, since 1958, and I've seen several really bad summers. Admittedly, this is the worst, but most large, old trees went through those droughts of the 50s, 1980, late 90s and 2005-2006 and are still alive today. Most will make it through this one if we get some rains this fall. We can't water the native woodlands anyway, so we might as well worry about something else.
Shade Trees
Mature shade trees, to a lesser extent, have been doing the same thing that woodland trees are doing in my notes above. They're just acknowledging that 2011 isn't going to amount to much. They're shedding tons of leaves, and they're dropping them early. Better species should be fine if we get fall and winter rains. In the meantime, water as you are able.
Where you need to worry more is with the less durable, fast-growing shade trees that struggle with all manner of insects and diseases. These trees have been weakened by the drought, and they're going to be far more vulnerable to pest invasion. My bet is that we'll find that we've lost a greater percentage of silver maples, mimosas, cottonwoods, fruitless mulberries, willows, Arizona ashes and other short-lived species when trees leaf out next spring.
20-year-old Leyland cypress trees have died due to simple neglect. Just a few dollars’ worth of water would have saved them.
Evergreen Shrubs and Trees
While deciduous plants are dropping leaves early, many of our evergreens are drying and dying in place. They don't have the mechanism for dropping leaves to get through the drought. I've seen hundreds of southern magnolias, Leyland cypresses, hollies, Indian hawthorns and even native eastern redcedar junipers turning brown. Sadly, those plants usually don't come back. Once browned, they're usually gone.
Deciduous Shrubs
Crape myrtles, althaeas, forsythias and other deciduous shrubs have lost many leaves. In fact, unirrigated plants may be completely bare already. That's probably not a good sign for any of them, and you certainly need to get water to them as soon as you can. Crape myrtles will be the most forgiving. They seem to bounce back better than most species, but they won't bloom as well next year if you don't water them soon.
Very large median bed of purple wintercreeper euonymus has been allowed to dry beyond permanent wilting point. Bare area marks a prior year’s drought where the groundcover did not come back.
Groundcovers
Asian jasmine beds have died by the thousands. That's really sad, too, because they take several years to establish, not to mention the expense of preparing the soil and buying and planting new plants. Once their leaves turn olive drab, then become tan and folded, the plants are pretty well gone. That's sad, too, because it doesn't take much water to keep Asian jasmine alive.
English ivy is the other big victim of the heat. If it sticks out into the sun at all, its leaves may be sunburned in large, light brown blotches. English ivy is a shade groundcover, but if trees lose their leaves early as we've already described, the ivy can be shoved into hot sun. Keep it moist and it should survive. You'll certainly have some tidy-up work to do when the weather begins to turn cool.
Roses
This summer has brutalized our roses. If you have browned buds and misshapen plants, do a bit of modest clean-up pruning to reshape the plants now. Try not, however, to remove more than 10 or 15 percent of their top growth this late in the season. You're just trying to help them look more presentable for the next several months. If they were vigorous going into the summer, they should be fine heading toward winter and spring 2012. (For more information on rose care, see Rosarian Mike Shoup’s “Rose Cuttings” this issue.)
Lawns
I've always contended that we Texans water our lawns too much, but I'm singing a new tune this year. People have just walked away from their lawns, and that's really too bad. Lawns are of significant value when it comes time to sell a house, plus your lawn is the carpet of your outdoor living spaces. Without a lawn, you don't really have a landscape.
If you have bermuda turf, resume watering as soon as you're able. If you have St. Augustine, you'll need to water and assess the magnitude of your losses. Hopefully, you'll have enough to repopulate the area. Otherwise, you may want to sow ryegrass for temporary cover this winter, and start planning now for replantings next spring. Zoysias are somewhat intermediate, but because of the cost of zoysia sod and the amount of time it takes to establish, hopefully you haven't lost any of your zoysia lawn. If you're in Northwest Texas, you probably have voids in your fescue lawn, and your normal September overseeding should take care of the issues.
GOT THIS FROM THE NEIL SPERRY NEWSLETTER THIS MORNING.
I only give up watering, when I have still a broom stick left!
Sure hope that your cypresses make it ...
I have been watering my plants deeply a few times a week, they're still getting fried. They're not dying due to lack of water because I've been very intentional with that and other plants in the area aren't dying. They are dying because they're getting fried to death.
Just a suggestion to find out how much water comes from your soaker hose, take an empty tuna can (clean of course, lol) mark the inside with 1/4" 1/2" 3/4" 1" mark lay several of them under a hole in the hose, start the timer when you turn on the hose, see how long it takes to reach each level marked inside the can. This will give you a pretty good idea of how long to let the water run to reach that depth in the ground. The reason I say for each is some days you might not want to run that long or other days you might want to run longer. Please let us know how your shurbs and trees do.
I wish you the best with your shrubs and trees, it can break a person's heart to loose them.
Jan
You got it, Steph. I water as directed but everything that the sun can reach is fried......and stunted. At least we are not in the middle of a hurricane. I have a well insulated home and the AC is churning away. After 7 years of neglect, I have started on some much needed projects inside. Usually spend all of my time outside 365 days a year.
since today we have water restriction one stage higher , which means, just water the garden once a week;-(
So sorry. We can't water between 10am and 6pm. Our community hasn't instituted restrictions as yet, BUT, 3 years ago they changed the rating scale. Three tiers now and each one starts at the first gallon. If you get into the third tier the cost is outrageous. They decided to hit people in the pocket book that way there is no way to cheat.....it shows on the meter. I have chosen to water at night with the sprinkler system. So has my next door neighbor. We look like an oasis in the neighborhood. However, we are a bird and wildlife sanctuary as the creeks are dry and there is no respite for the wildlife. At dusk last night I watched as 4 Robins and two other birds perched on the fence in the stream of the sprinkler. We have 4 bird baths, one with a fountain, and a stock trough that we keep full for the wildlife. We are in an urban neighborhood but there are still bird, coons, possums, squirrels, cats, bobcats and worlds of bird. Some I have never seen before and cannot ID. We eat out or entertain less to afford the water bill. Hasn't really helped the plants much, they are still fried.
Have been watching the thread about Irene with our DG friends on the coast. Many are in harms way. Puts my problems in perspective. Good to have you as a new friend.
Christi
BTW We are not so far apart. I am 1/2 mile off 35E and Copperas Cover is probably around 75-80 miles or less. DeSoto is the first suburb in Dallas County south.
We start water restrictions on Monday. You're never supposed to water between 10am-6pm, but on top of that, you can only run your sprinklers twice a week. My days are Thursday and Sunday. We can use soaker hoses and water by hand whenever we want.
I use now my beloved above ground pool as a water source and this helps alot. We also have 2 bird baths and there are plenty of species some cardinal couples , mockingbirds, goldfinches , roadrunners , we also live out of the city limit. I still feed the birds with fancy birdseed and even the blue jay likes it also the painted bunting.
I think for the leyland cypress more of a risk when they are stressed is canker? So keep an eye out for that. If you do get some, you'd probably want to get it out as early as possible, so maybe not to spread. If you do lose some, maybe replace them with a native.
