You may remember that we did a serious hack job on the Albizia late in the winter of 2024, I wrote about it in the second half of this post. The reason for the cut back was two fold, first the tree was getting huge, too big for our small garden and I knew it would respond well to a serious prune. The second issue was an infestation of Albizia psyllid, or Acizzia jamatonica if you wanna talk Latin. Only the south side of the tree was involved, so I hoped by cutting it back maybe we'd get rid of the bugs. That reasoning proved successful last summer, but not so much this year...
Gross.
As if leaves full of plant lice raining down isn't bad enough, they also produce long threads of honeydew, contained in tubes of sticky white wax. This was just one afternoon's worth as I've been hosing off the plants underneath the tree every single day....
As if leaves full of plant lice raining down isn't bad enough, they also produce long threads of honeydew, contained in tubes of sticky white wax. This was just one afternoon's worth as I've been hosing off the plants underneath the tree every single day....
Evidence of more help to come...
But sadly there was just no way I could wait. Things were just too far gone.
I discovered a few interesting abnormalities, like leaves with a twist...
And fasciation on a few branches
Since I feel a bit like I'm writing an endorsement for the Fiskers tool I should also share that once I'd done everything I could with the pruners I went ahead and attached the saw. This thing extends from 7.9 to 12 feet... it's amazing. The saw isn't a cutting tool for fine jobs...
But it allowed me to do this on my own, safely from the ground, no ladders! No husbands! (those cut branches are taller than they look in this photo, over 11 ft for the shortest and up from there)
Andrew said he'll get up on the ladder at some point and tidy up the ugly ends of the branches.
As much as I will miss that dark foliage, cleaning off the staghorns and hanging them back up with nothing but clean, clear, sky above felt fabulous.
From the U.S. Forest Service: "First seen in the US in 2006 in Georgia: Acizzia jamatonica (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Psyllidae) is reported for the first time in North America. Because the species is thought to feed exclusively on Albizia, it may prove to be an effective biocontrol agent against the invasive Albizia julibrissin in the southeastern United States. Because A. julibrissin is also an ornamental plant of some importance, the arrival of A. jamatonica may not be welcomed by many."
I saw first hand just how invasive Albizia julibrissin can be in the East when I flew in to the Washington DC area for the 2017 Fling, they were everywhere! They aren't nearly as pervasive out here in my part of the West, but they're definitely loved as ornamental trees. I wonder who else has experienced this nasty pest? On iNaturalist there are sightings in New York, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Ohio, and Oregon. Portland, Oregon, to be exact. Interesting.
How will I treat for this pest? I have no idea, I haven't been able to find anything helpful online. I'd love to hear from anyone who knows! Perhaps I need to say good-bye to the tree, as much as I will miss its fabulous foliage and the fact it provides a great place to hang my staghorns.
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Fiskars tools are great - I have several! Interesting post about this tree which is one that Michael has wanted forever. He wants the regular green one though. I remember growing up in the South, they were everywhere, until they were not. I think a cold winter must have gotten rid of them. I thought they were messy which would normally be a red flag for him, but he still wants one. I usually wouldn't advocate a chemical but in this case, I would do it if something is available.
ReplyDeleteReally? But it's so cold hardy, like Zone 6 (below zero) hardy. And they are so messy, especially when they bloom. I think maybe Michael should convince one of your neighbor's to plant one!
DeleteYour saw looks so handy, my version doesn't have that power side. Sawing way up over your head is no joke. Power anything is welcome. Yuck, yuck. I'm out to look at my Summer Chocolate right now!
ReplyDeleteYa I am glad I got the one with the saw, the pruners are great but the ability to cut even bigger branches is nice. Oh and there's no actual power but my muscles... a boost from a motor would be appreciated! I pray your tree is, and continues to be, clean!
DeleteUgh! I do miss the Albizia julibrissin (NOT chocolate) that came with our garden. It was spectacular, if also a champion leaf-litterer, in the early years. I never saw a bug like yours but what the arborist believed was a shot hole borer eventually caused its demise. I also tried to save the tree by cutting half of it away but gave up in October 2020 when we accepted that it was nearly dead. However, only this week, I've found no less than 3 tiny Albizia seedlings - it wants to live!
ReplyDeleteI have never found a seedling, I wonder if the "chocolate" version just doesn't seed around as much (not that I've had blooms the last two years)?
DeleteSad about this lovely tree. The silver lining obviously is that it wouldn't infect other plants in your garden: what a relief. The ladybug porn video was hilarious :-D
ReplyDeleteChavli
Ya... that was pretty intense wasn't it?
DeleteLoree, when I want to kill a tree, but keep the trunk, I drill a series of holes, usually in a spiral, around the trunk, and pour in bleach. This has worked well, even on plum trees, without the anticipated suckers. Dana
ReplyDeleteGood to know, it just may come to that!
DeleteWill or are the Staghorn ferns happy there with out the coverage of the tree canopy?
ReplyDeleteThey were fine, but I pulled them for our cloudless 100+ days... they didn't need that bright sunshine when they weren't used to it. The magnolia does a pretty good job of shielding them.
Delete