The wascally wabbits got into my garden, and nibbled H*** out of my 5 - 6ft high sheuched-in fruit trees down by the fence. Apples, pears and a plum - all damaged. I'm never too sure which is which unless the fruit is on them, so I can't tell you which is what. But what I am wondering is how can I give them first aid ?
A couple of them are just about ring-barked (nibbled all the way around which usually kills a tree) - but there is signs that bits of the underpart of the bark is still intact in narrow strips, which hopefully will allow sap etc to rise. What I thought was that maybe wrapping the trunks in fleece would allow the remaining bark to breathe while protecting damaged tissue against frost, fungal spores, etc. The damage is all above the graft sites, so there should still be the chance of getting a decent tree if it survives the shock, but obviously I want to preserve the upper part of the trunks if possible to help speed up future growth. Anyone here have any experience of this sort of problem, or read about it ?
The wabbits won't be back, I set the dog on 'em and now the gate's closed.
A couple of them are just about ring-barked (nibbled all the way around which usually kills a tree) - but there is signs that bits of the underpart of the bark is still intact in narrow strips, which hopefully will allow sap etc to rise. What I thought was that maybe wrapping the trunks in fleece would allow the remaining bark to breathe while protecting damaged tissue against frost, fungal spores, etc. The damage is all above the graft sites, so there should still be the chance of getting a decent tree if it survives the shock, but obviously I want to preserve the upper part of the trunks if possible to help speed up future growth. Anyone here have any experience of this sort of problem, or read about it ?
The wabbits won't be back, I set the dog on 'em and now the gate's closed.
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