Responding to Frost Bite: A Love-Wait Relationship
Southwest Yard & Garden by Dr. Marisa Thompson
with select columns written by Dr. Curtis Smith in 2011
Snowy neighborhood in Los Lunas. It’s too early to tell which plants were damaged by the cold this winter. Photo credit Marisa Thompson.
County Cooperative Extension Service Agents and Specialists across the state are fielding questions about cold injury on landscape plants and orchard trees and what to do about it. The low temperatures in mid-February didn’t break many records for us in New Mexico. Other parts of the region were hit badly. My cousin in San Antonio, Texas, shared a photo of the huge sago palm in her yard that looks like it saw a ghost—in just a few freezing days, all of the dark green fronds turned an unnatural off-white color. This recent arctic blast reminded many New Mexicans of the deep freeze of February 2011. I searched the Southwest Yard & Garden column archives and selected excerpts written 10 years ago by my predecessor Dr. Curtis Smith, with helpful advice on dealing with frost damage. Spoiler alert: There are no quick fixes. For now, just water and wait. That’s why I’m calling it a “love-wait relationship.”
My cousin shared this image of her cat staring at a sago palm that lost all of its green color after last week's deep freeze in San Antonio, Texas. Photo credit Hillary Thompson. |
March 5, 2011, column by Dr. Curtis Smith (CLICK HERE for archived original)
Question: Our wax leaf ligustrum’s leaves have turned a brown color, probably from
the terrible cold we all experienced. Is it likely dead, or do you recommend
trimming it back and waiting to see whether it is still alive at the core and
roots? It’s about 5 feet tall. We moved it about 3 years ago, and I fussed over
it after the move because we had to cut part of the taproot off. This is a
tough plant with a desire to survive, I think.
- Barb R., Alamogordo
Answer: Ligustrum japonicum, the wax leaf ligustrum, is one of many broadleaf evergreen plants that suffered damage this winter. Wax leaf ligustrum is listed as hardy in USDA hardiness zone 8 and warmer. You live in zone 8, but this year the temperature probably dropped below the expected 10°F low. Your ligustrum probably survived, but some of the twigs and branches may have been killed by the cold. If the shrub needs pruning, you can trim it back now. However, since you may not be able to easily determine which branches were damaged, you can also wait until new leaves begin to form and prune out branches that do not exhibit new, healthy growth.
There is a chance that your wax leaf ligustrum and those of other gardeners were killed. If these shrubs were planted on the north side of a house where it was colder and remained colder longer, the temperatures may have been fatal. Even if these plants were not killed, the branches may have been killed further down the plant and will probably begin growth later than usual.
Other broadleaf evergreen
shrubs have been damaged in New Mexico this year. Photinia shrubs, which are
rarely damaged by cold winters, except this year, are also exhibiting brown leaves.
The advice to wait before cutting them down is relevant for them as well. This
spring, the virtue of patience will be more valuable than usual.
March 26, 2011, by Dr. Curtis Smith (CLICK HERE for archived original)
Question: I heard somewhere recently that
pyracanthas were damaged by the frost but will come back in time. Mine are 40
years old, huge like trees, and all 30 of them look dead. Are they likely to
return, or do I have to have them cut down?
- Judy C.
Answer: It is possible that the
pyracantha plants were killed, but it is unlikely. The leaves of many broadleaf
evergreen plants were injured and have turned brown or black. The twigs may
have been injured, but buds on the larger branches and trunks have probably
survived. You will not know for sure until later this spring when new growth
begins. New growth may occur later than usual because of the injury. After
growth has developed and you see which twigs and branches (if any) were killed,
you can prune them back to healthy growth. This just requires waiting and some irrigation
to provide water for the new growth. Without leaves, however, less water than
usual is needed, but this has been a very dry winter.
April 30, 2011, by Dr. Curtis Smith (CLICK HERE for archived original)
Question: My Mexican elder trees
do not have any leaves on them, but several of them have a lot of shoots
growing from the trunk near the ground. In the past I have removed the shoots
to encourage growth in the canopy (or so I thought that would work). Is that
the right thing to do?
- Barb D., Las Cruces
Answer: It is usually a good idea to remove the new shoots forming at the base of a Mexican elder, desert willow, or other tree that tries to be a shrub by producing numerous basal shoots. However, this year some of these trees may have lost twigs and even branches (perhaps trunks) to the extreme cold. Even if new growth develops, it may be weak and may eventually die back. The lower sprouts may be necessary to save the trees.
In some cases, the renewed plant may appear to be a shrub for a few years. After a couple of years, you can select one or a few healthy sprouts to become the new trunk. For now, it may be wise to let the basal shoots grow until you know how much damage occurred in the upper portions of your tree.
To access 25 years of NMSU Southwest Yard & Garden column archives, visit https://aces.nmsu.edu/ces/yard/archives/.
For more gardening information, visit the NMSU Extension Urban Horticulture page at Desert Blooms (http://desertblooms.nmsu.edu/) and the NMSU Horticulture Publications page at http://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/.
Marisa Y. Thompson, Ph.D., is the Extension
Urban Horticulture Specialist in the Department of Extension Plant Sciences and
is based at the New Mexico State University Agricultural Science Center at Los
Lunas.
Edible New Mexico Magazine article crosslink -- GROWING YOUR FUTURE FAVORITE TREE
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