High-phosphorus fertilizer helps plants flower, grow roots
Q: Do you recommend any cactus fertilizer for the San Pedros I am growing inside my house? I repotted them in September, but they are still small.
A: Hard to say. Apply a small amount of fertilizer next watering and see what happens. If any one of these 13 or 14 minerals essential for plants is in short supply, it can hinder its growth.
A high-phosphorus fertilizer, the middle number of three, should always be included when repotting. Perhaps it was not in this case.
If you’re not sure, use a water-soluble fertilizer high in phosphorus and dissolved in water for your next couple of waterings. The extra phosphorus will not hurt the plant.
When phosphorus is available, it helps plants flower and grow roots. But for new plants, it’s a good idea to have it present from the start. If phosphorus is in short supply, it can cause stunting and poor growth.
When cactus pads are planted commercially in poorer countries, manure is added to backfill at planting time. Manure is high in phosphorus and nitrogen and rich in other minerals. The combination of phosphorus and nitrogen helps in the rooting of cactus pads and other cactus propagules.
It’s not a bad idea to use a water-soluble fertilizer that has as many minerals in it as possible but highest in phosphorus.
The San Pedro cactus is from the higher and wetter elevations of South America, so it likes a little bit of afternoon protection when grown outside in our more inhospitable Mojave Desert. Don’t water too often.
It is still a cactus and will die in soils that hold water for a long time. Water it after the soil dries. It will need lots of sunlight for faster and healthy growth. You might try putting it outside during the summertime if you think it is not getting enough light.
Q: My grapevine produced many grape berries growing in large clusters. I notice that birds are now helping themselves daily to the berries. I once saw a picture of someone using brown paper sandwich bags to cover or encase these fruit clusters to protect them from critters and the weather.
A: There is some evidence that bagging can affect the quality of grapes if they are bagged too early. Bird netting is a better solution for protecting grapes but may be a problem for birds.
Make sure it is bird damage. Birds peck and leave behind damaged berries. Grapes are considered a non-climacteric fruit; they don’t get any sweeter after they are picked.
Personally, I like to grow grapes and produce berry clusters in the shade of the vine. That requires trellising and support of the vines so the berry clusters hang.
That helps prevent sun damage to the grape clusters, and birds have a hard time roosting and devouring the berries. I have had problems with ground squirrels stealing entire berries when they ripen, though.
If you are using a refractometer to judge when to harvest, the increase in sugar content occurs at the rate of 1 percent every two to three days in the summer. If you decide to use bags, mark your calendar so you know the approximate time to pick them.
If you are going to bag your grapes, I would not use plastic bags but white lunch bags instead of brown paper bags. The white bags are cooler than the brown bags, and they spread light around better inside. Delay bagging your grapes as long as possible or until they start to show signs of color (veraison) or the first sign of bird damage, whichever comes first.
Q: I planted a true Chinese elm (not Siberian elm) that I purchased for shade in my front yard from a local box store last October. It was late and the leaves dropped soon after I bought it. This year the tree grew new leaves that were small compared to last year’s. If I scratch the trunk or branches, the tree is still green though.
A: First off, Chinese elm is a good choice for our desert, but it is a big tree and considered mesic. It’s different from Siberian elm, which is considered a trash tree and used to be commonly found in the valley.
Chinese elm handles lawns or poor soils well and may even thrive surrounded by rock mulch. It is a tough tree. There are several varieties of Chinese elm with different improved characteristics, so pick a variety when possible.
But it will grow to 50 or 60 feet when fully mature if it has access to water. It’s considered a fast-growing tree.
I would not recommend it for home landscapes, even if you have a two-story home, because it is so big. Because it is a large tree, it will use a lot of water when it’s fully mature, perhaps as much as 400 gallons per day all through June, July and August, in about 30 years.
Even though it is called Evergreen elm, it is winter deciduous, so dropping its leaves in the winter would be normal in our cold desert.
Secondly, when a plant is grown in a mild climate but sold in a different climate where there is more intense sunlight and higher temperatures, the leaves will decrease in size and get thicker or tougher. I don’t know which nursery grew this tree originally, but if it were in a mild climate, perhaps even grown under shade cloth, then it would produce larger leaves but have smaller leaves the year after planting. So please take that into consideration.
When it gets water after planting, it should get about the same amount as the container it came in. If it was a 5-gallon container, then give it 5 to 10 gallons each time you water. If it came in a 15-gallon container, then give it 15 to 20 gallons each time.
As the tree gets bigger, it needs more water applied to a larger area because of the spread of its roots. Because it will be a large tree as it matures, wet the soil to a depth of 3 feet each time you water. Watering deep encourages deeper rooting and better stability for a larger tree.
Q: I have a pear tree whose leaves yellow and then die and turn black at the margins or the tips. The black color works its way inward from the margins toward the center of the leaf, or from the leaf apex toward the petiole in a wavy pattern. I am suspecting possible fireblight disease. I have not seen the shepherd’s hook at the stem tips or black coloring on the bark.
A: The black you are seeing on the edges of leaves is not from a disease called fireblight but rather leaf scorch. Leaf scorch in pear, unlike other fruit trees, causes the leaf edges to be crunchy black instead of crunchy brown. When you see fireblight disease a few times, you will see the difference.
Pear trees are out of their climate comfort zone during hot, dry summers in Las Vegas. Like most plants, they grow best between 55 to 85 degrees. Above 85 degrees, they struggle because of the heat.
Just like humans, healthy plants are better able to adjust to the heat, show fewer symptoms like blackened leaves from leaf scorch, than unhealthy plants. The yellowing of the leaves tells me it’s not healthy.
Early next year — January to March — apply an iron chelate (EDDHA iron chelate works the best) to the soil around the tree and make sure you water it so you can’t see it anymore.
Make sure your trees are getting enough water when it is hot. Do not apply water every day.
When they are young and about 5 to 6 feet tall, they should be getting about 10 to 15 gallons of water three times a week. Make sure the water is applied under the tree to at least half of its canopy but starting 12 inches from the trunk.
That means as the tree gets bigger and wider, the amount of water applied increases and applied to a larger area under the tree canopy (add more emitters).
Cover the soil with a 3- to 4-inch layer of wood chip mulch rather than a layer of rock mulch. Wood chips add organics to the soil as it decomposes. Rock doesn’t.
Any layer of surface mulch will extend watering an extra day each week. So instead of watering three or four times each week, water only two or three times each week if wood chip mulch is used.
Bob Morris is a horticulture expert and professor emeritus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Visit his blog at xtremehorticulture.blogspot.com. Send questions to Extremehort@aol.com.