My knowledge is quite limited, so I'm coming to the experts for help. From the attached pictures, I'm hoping to find out exactly what kind of trees these are (I am not the original homeowner) and what I should do (trim/prune/remove) with the yellow trees.
As a primer, I recall the previous homeowner mentioning they were some kind of Korean tree, possibly pine or fir, but I honestly do not know and I'm not confident in anything he told me. I've attached a close-up shot of a branch for identification purposes.
Also attached are pictures of the yellow trees, one right next to a healthy green one. We had a very serious drought here in Missouri and that's what I believe caused this. Last year, I had the same thing happen to four small ones on the end of my property and as you can see from one of the attached pictures, I pruned it back, basically lopping off the top and it did return to the green color and grow new branches this year, it just looks bad/odd shaped. Because those trees came back, I'm hoping the same will hold true again for these.
Also, attached is a picture of some bark I removed from a branch to show the tissue inside, I did this on several branches on both the yellow trees and green ones and the tissue all looks the same, kind of an off-white color, somewhat supple feeling (i.e., not dried out).
Any suggestion with the best method of saving these trees would be very much appreciated. I am unsure if I should just remove all small branches or just trim the tree down substantially, or something else entirely. Many thanks for your time and assistance!
Stephen
Attachment:
View attachment 256262
As a primer, I recall the previous homeowner mentioning they were some kind of Korean tree, possibly pine or fir, but I honestly do not know and I'm not confident in anything he told me. I've attached a close-up shot of a branch for identification purposes.
Also attached are pictures of the yellow trees, one right next to a healthy green one. We had a very serious drought here in Missouri and that's what I believe caused this. Last year, I had the same thing happen to four small ones on the end of my property and as you can see from one of the attached pictures, I pruned it back, basically lopping off the top and it did return to the green color and grow new branches this year, it just looks bad/odd shaped. Because those trees came back, I'm hoping the same will hold true again for these.
Also, attached is a picture of some bark I removed from a branch to show the tissue inside, I did this on several branches on both the yellow trees and green ones and the tissue all looks the same, kind of an off-white color, somewhat supple feeling (i.e., not dried out).
Any suggestion with the best method of saving these trees would be very much appreciated. I am unsure if I should just remove all small branches or just trim the tree down substantially, or something else entirely. Many thanks for your time and assistance!
Stephen
Attachment:
View attachment 256262