Pseudomonas maybe. If it is a Sango Kaku than that’s my guess
Not much you can do here brother. Being so close to the trunk makes it tough. Normally you could try and snip off the affected sections.
May just have to wait it out. Some recommend spraying impacted site with copper. Never had luck doing that
damadmetz
I’ve no idea but that is one lanky tree.
Nutcollectr
I had this as well last year and the reason was most likely that I transferred a fungus from one of my tree to the other via my cutting tool.
I lost mine and you can probably only cut again on a healthy section and pray it recovers at the trunk.
Good reminder to always sanitize your tools in between trees.
-ignotus
Dead 😵
daethon
Dead unfortunately. Looks infected
fatboystring
Is that a scale insect near the base of the trunk? I lost the entire canopy of a 5ft tall acer due to them just over 4 years ago. In my case I scrubbed them off and chopped the trunk. The tree survived and is currently in development – still lots of work to do.
7 Comments
Pseudomonas maybe. If it is a Sango Kaku than that’s my guess
Not much you can do here brother. Being so close to the trunk makes it tough. Normally you could try and snip off the affected sections.
May just have to wait it out. Some recommend spraying impacted site with copper. Never had luck doing that
I’ve no idea but that is one lanky tree.
I had this as well last year and the reason was most likely that I transferred a fungus from one of my tree to the other via my cutting tool.
I lost mine and you can probably only cut again on a healthy section and pray it recovers at the trunk.
Good reminder to always sanitize your tools in between trees.
Dead 😵
Dead unfortunately. Looks infected
Is that a scale insect near the base of the trunk? I lost the entire canopy of a 5ft tall acer due to them just over 4 years ago. In my case I scrubbed them off and chopped the trunk. The tree survived and is currently in development – still lots of work to do.
Verticillium wilt or root rot, it’s dead