Hi,
We moved into a new house last summer and were very pleased to find a small apple tree growing in the border in the backyard. However, the trunk, branches and fruit are all covered in scale insects - on the oldest wood you can't see the wood for the bugs! The newer wood this year started out clean but the insects have gradually moved in and are really stunting the fruit.
I've not read of any way to cure a badly infected tree so I'm planning to take it out and replace it with a new tree this autumn. My question is how likely are the insects to survive in the soil and pass on to the next tree? It's a bed in the patio so I could feasibly remove all the soil and replace it but is this necessary? There are other plants in the bed (2 roses and some grass/bulbs) but are all pretty straggly so I'll probably remove those too.
Thanks,
S
We moved into a new house last summer and were very pleased to find a small apple tree growing in the border in the backyard. However, the trunk, branches and fruit are all covered in scale insects - on the oldest wood you can't see the wood for the bugs! The newer wood this year started out clean but the insects have gradually moved in and are really stunting the fruit.
I've not read of any way to cure a badly infected tree so I'm planning to take it out and replace it with a new tree this autumn. My question is how likely are the insects to survive in the soil and pass on to the next tree? It's a bed in the patio so I could feasibly remove all the soil and replace it but is this necessary? There are other plants in the bed (2 roses and some grass/bulbs) but are all pretty straggly so I'll probably remove those too.
Thanks,
S
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