Gardening Questions and Answers

A new gardening question of the day appears every day of the year on the front page of Almanac.com. Below is the answer to one of the questions from our Gardening Questions and Answers Archive where you can find over 400 more gardening questions (with answers!).

Question:

I planted a spruce tree three years ago. It is approximately three and a half feet tall. This year, the front part of the tree began losing its needles and is starting to turn brown. Is there anything I can do to bring the tree back to health?

Answer:

Winter drying, winter burn, salt damage, and extreme cold can cause loss of needles. Winter drying occurs when the needles lose moisture and cannot replace it because the soil around the roots is frozen. Warm winds also dry out the buds and needles that extend above the snow cover. Winter burn occurs when the temperature changes suddenly. This is common on the south sides of trees, where exposure to the sun is greatest. Winter drying and winter burn often occur together. Salt damage occurs when road salt splashes up on the foliage or when the roots absorb salt in the soil. The damage is usually greatest on the side facing a roadway. In any of these cases, don't be too quick to cut out the brown foliage. Wait several weeks to see which shoots green up and bud out, then prune the dead portions.

Make money for your school, church, or club with the NEW Almanac Fund-raiser program!

About Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us | Employment | Advertise | RSS Feeds | Site Search

Yankee Publishing Inc., P.O. Box 520, Dublin, NH 03444, USA, (603) 563-8111

Copyright ©2009, Yankee Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.

Interactive features developed and maintained by Reinvented Inc.