Tuesday 7 June 2011

Should I Be Watering My Trees After This Dry Spring

This has been an exceptionally dry spring in most of the UK. Only the north west has received normal amounts of rain. It has followed a very cold winter and a recent prolonged windy period has itself caused extra drying. There are worries that the combination of extreme seasons may be of particular harm to larger plants which have been planted within the last couple of years. These may not yet have developed the extensive root systems which would see them through a drought and the result could be die-back or the death of the plants. A sign of the stress which the plant is suffering might be the loss of leaves or sections of the plant or, for fruiting trees, the loss of fruit. Remember that the rain showers of the recent weeks may not yet have penetrated far enough into the ground to reach lower roots.

If you are worried that these conditions might apply to your plants, or you see signs of stress, then now is the time to take action. Fruit trees in particular may need attention as fruit, which is mostly water anyway, will be swelling and may require more water than the tree can provide. Fruit trees may cast off a large percentage of their growing fruit to reduce the stress they are suffering. To counter this a regular application of a trickling hose to the soil surface around the trees will help. If this is not possible then a bucket, or watering can, of water applied regularly may have the same effect. Action now may prevent fruit fall, leaf loss or the death of a large plant.

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