I have a customer of mine that I usually trim all of her oaks and hickory trees this time of year but we have been mostly in the 40's with barely any snow this winter. Now it has been in the 50's this past week and she want to wiat on pruning her trees as a local landscaper said if she has them prunned, her trees will end up dying.
Anyone ever hear of this?
I went ahead and told her anthying small under 8'' or so shouldnt affect the tree especially if im not take very much off of them. most to lift the trees and get rid of interfering branches/ damaged ones.
What's everyone elses thoughts on this?
Go ahead and prune them, the big thing is waiting for the bugs to go dormant. We now have had enough cold (below freezing) nights in a row to be realtvly safe. There is never any guaranteeing, working them in the winter, according to old school, just gives them the best chance to avoid the bugs. It is a mind trip with the weather we are having, for sure. Good to ask before moving in. i just started oaks after that last spell, not sure what county ur in, but here and muscatine county made national news a coupe years ago about the wilt, real bad here in the tree stands, sat pics of the large wooded areas in the middle of summer showed thousands of brown canopy's,the individual normally doesn't have a chance if worked in the summer, as we have lots of wilt in the woods, ya cut, bugs come out like a caged lion to feed on that precious sap. I don't see a lot of root action, most of the wilt I see is on urban trees that are by themselves, so the bugs be the cause.We had one that may be infected via the roots, we trenched and will see this spring. Last year we took 21 oaks out due to wilt, all of them had been pruned in the summer. So, although I like the post about the podcast, it does happen, depending on your area and the micro climate around the tree. If your out on a farm far, away from others, good chance, next to a large wooded area full of dead oak, no chance.
So, to make it easy, when talkin bout wilt, the tree doesn't care what the temp is, the bugs do.
Landscrapers are the worst, always look at the strip mall trees and how they have been totally mutilated. Seen a guy using a hedge trimmer on a crab apple
To the OP, not sure what you mean with the 8". Any wound can be infected and all wounds effect the tree, no matter how small. That is a big piece to be taking for a prune, especially if you are hitting them every year. Why are you hitting them all the time? Need to give the trees some time to recover. I wait at least a couple years, even on restorations, do a bit, wait for a while, do a bit, wait for a while.....repeat.
That all being said, this thread should be moved to Plant Health or 101