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FROST

Posted: March 15th, 2018, 6:54 am
by FUTCHCAIRO
WELL WE HAD ANOTHER HEAVY FROST THIS MORNIN, SURE WISH IT WOULD WARM UP AND STAY THAT WAY. THE GREEN GRASS WILL BE BROWN AGAIN AFTER THIS MORNINS FROST.
PA
SEMPER FI salute3 salute3

Re: FROST

Posted: March 15th, 2018, 6:59 am
by Blue spinner
don't look like we got a frost in Pelham at least at my house

Re: FROST

Posted: March 15th, 2018, 7:20 am
by Steve Stinson
No frost in the Monticello area. Woke up to about 34 degrees.

Re: FROST

Posted: March 15th, 2018, 2:04 pm
by big bend gyrene
Steve Stinson wrote:No frost in the Monticello area. Woke up to about 34 degrees.
Wish I could say the same about my neck of the woods in Monticello... was 31 and we had light frost holding onto the grass until around 9am. Wrapped blankets around younger fruit trees I've got planted so crossing fingers they'll be ok.

JUST AS A FYI to all who might see this, what's recently done more damage than frost to young stressed trees at my place is tiny &@#! ambrosia boring beetles. They supposedly are drawn to ethanol released from trees after being stressed by frost, bore into the trunk, and then go to town boring AND introducing a host fungus into trees that will kill the trees unless you cut them clean at the ground. Had to cut back a big fig tree on my place last year and a mulberry tree this year.

Obvious giveaway you've had a tree attacked by the boring beetles is white toothpick like projections sticking out of the tree up and down the trunk area.

Re: FROST

Posted: March 15th, 2018, 2:08 pm
by big bend gyrene
Pic pulled from google to show what the "toothpicks" look like if the ambrosia beetles find your young trees.
Granulate-Ambrosia-Beetle-damage-400x226.png
Granulate-Ambrosia-Beetle-damage-400x226.png (194.32 KiB) Viewed 1584 times