Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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I have three weeping bottlebrush trees that provide a much needed privacy wall for me. Luckily, the hurricane did not cause the trees to snap, but some of the ends are turning brown and the trees are thinning. I heard these trees are susceptible to wind damage, but don't know what to do for the trees to restore them to their fullness.
Any suggestions would be TRULY be appreciated! ![]() |
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#2
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These are pretty hardy trees/bushes. I had one tha was planted too close to our birdcage. I cut it way back to the main trunks with very little if any branches left. My intent was to remove the remaining portion on a future visit. Well that ended up being 3 months later. To my surprise it had grown back, complete with new bright pink foliage. Just give it time, I'm sure it will come back.
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#3
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Do you think I should cut off the areas that are brown?
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#4
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Yes, Prune them way back for fuller more beautiful trees..
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#5
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Sorry, I am not an expert on the bush, just sharing my experience. But my unprofessional opinion would be trimming dead or dying areas, encourages new growth. Give it a little longer and determine what is beyond self healing. Things grow quick down here!
Good luck, I'm sure you will get better feedback soon. |
#6
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Mine was about 4 years old. It was getting pretty big, but I kept it staked. So, a branch with about 1/3 of the canopy snapped off and split the trunk. I had to have it taken out. Probably would have been better for it to lean over, and then prop it up again.
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#7
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I think that is a graft as the plant is normally a bush. My suggestion at the top is to take some pictures of the plant and be sure to show the location where it is as well and bring it to the cooperative extension with a sample of the brach you describe as having brown tips. You might also look it up on the internet. Among other things you will find materials from the cooperative extension. That might save you tinme to go there and more important you will get a researched report by their expert on the bottle brush rather than someone trying to deal with everything. It is time to play Sherlock Holmes. When, were these plants put in? You say,"some of the ends are turning brown," are the brown ends on only one plant? Only one branch? If, only one branch, can you simply remove that one branch and cut out the problem? If, so, be sure to clean your cutting tools before and after. You seem to be focused on the wind. Remember with the hurricane we also had 8-10 inches of rain. Brown tips could simply be over watering combined with poor drainage-our poor soil. The bottlebrush is a tough plant. BUT, YOU can kill it with too much IMPROPER care. DO NOT FERTILIZE IN NOW-it is naturally slowing down for winter. |
#8
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The OP says weeping trees.
The bottlebrush is normally a BUSH. The ones they sell as weeping trees are grafts. If, you cut them, as you suggest, you will either kill it or get a plant that is the original root stock. |
#9
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#10
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Don't cut anything now. Wait until mid February to prune.
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Closed Thread |
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