Wow! That's amazing how minor the damage was! I assume the oriental spruce, Norway spruce, and southern pines were perfectly fine! Also, have any of the local hardwood trees in your area leafed out yet?
I only showed the trees that have broken bud already... The others are all still waiting. For hardwoods, i only see bradford pears and amur honeysuckle leafing out, but lots of trees are blooming now.
abies concolor is supposed to do well in the midwestern area like here in Ohio, but to be honest the ones that I've seen don't look that healthy to me. Very sparse needles on what I've seen.
@@theweirdospfan.28 You are correct. The only little wrinkle in this case is that my blue cloak abies concolor is grafted onto abies firma rootstock, which does tolerate moisture.
Wow! That's amazing how minor the damage was! I assume the oriental spruce, Norway spruce, and southern pines were perfectly fine! Also, have any of the local hardwood trees in your area leafed out yet?
I only showed the trees that have broken bud already... The others are all still waiting. For hardwoods, i only see bradford pears and amur honeysuckle leafing out, but lots of trees are blooming now.
abies concolor is supposed to do well in the midwestern area like here in Ohio, but to be honest the ones that I've seen don't look that healthy to me. Very sparse needles on what I've seen.
The problem is is that they need dry soil. Do not water them or put them in a moist spot. They prefer dryness.
@@theweirdospfan.28 You are correct. The only little wrinkle in this case is that my blue cloak abies concolor is grafted onto abies firma rootstock, which does tolerate moisture.