Ich ließ einen großen Baum im Wind umfallen und zerquetschte diese 10-jährige Nektarine. Bei den Aufräumarbeiten wurde es etwa 50 cm (20 Zoll) über dem Boden abgeschnitten. Es ist Frühling hier in Australien und es hat begonnen, neues Wachstum zu sprießen. Nach ein paar Tipps, was ich tun kann, damit es wieder in einen Zustand kommt, in dem es Früchte tragen kann.

    Offensichtlich verfügt es immer noch über ein ausgereiftes Wurzelsystem, das diese kleinen Zweige ernährt, daher habe ich mich gefragt, ob die Zugabe eines stickstoffreichen Düngers die Lösung sein könnte, wenn man bedenkt, dass das Hauptziel im Moment das Stängel- und Blattwachstum ist. Irgendwelche Ideen?

    Von: Glittering_Turnip526

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    25 Comments

    1. Don’t over feed, you will burn the roots.

      Give it normal amounts and keep it watered. It looks like it’s doing fine already, just needs time now.

    2. MrArborsexual on

      Next dormant season cut the stump lower.

      Where it is growing now you’re going to end up with a rotted out hollow tree that will probably snap at that height at some point.

    3. Spare_Laugh9953 on

      Do not add any fertilizer, now what is left over to those small branches is food, since all the energy is coming from the roots to feed an entire tree. I would simply apply healing putty to the wound so that it does not get a fungal infection and I would let it recover.

    4. silverchypre on

      Just let it do its thing. Changing the care/conditions of an already stressed plant is advised against and you can see it’s pushing new growth really well. It just needs time

    5. FeaturelessPat on

      Kiss the stem where it’s been cut at least once every week. The endorphins give the plant extra energy and help it heal or something, i don’t know I never really studied whoreticulture.

    6. COMPOST AND WATER AND STORIES OF GAYA – oh yeah, what yabbydabby said 🙂

    7. MaleficentTomatoes on

      It actually looks like it’s recovering really well. Don’t overfertilize or you’ll burn the roots. Keep doing what you’re doing and wait.

    8. VeenaSchism on

      It might not be a nectarine when it comes back, if it was cut below the graft. But it looks like a healthy plant, I would let her rip and find out what you get!

    9. branches appear to be far enough above the graft to be the tree, feeding it is definitley a good idea

      it should recover

    10. a_megalops on

      Let those 3 or 4 braches grow for a year, then prune them in the winter. Let those grow and select 3 or 4 sub-branches the next winter to keep. Then keep pruning it around head high every year. Boom

    11. This will actually be awesome! Just let it grow. Maybe stake the branches so they’re further apart as they grow then you’ll have lots of low wide open branches that are healthier from good circulation and better access to sunlight and you’ll get really amazing nectarines! It might have done you a favor.

    12. Happy-For-No-Reason on

      those roots are gonna pump the canopy up in no time.

      keep new growth protected for the first year frosts, feed and water as normal. should recover well by year 2-3

    13. SouthSky3655 on

      When I bought my house in 1994 I had a dogwood tree that looked like that. Not much happened for about three years but then it bounced back and it’s a completely normal looking dogwood tree now. Give it time if you can, and look at the suckers like the future trunk and branches they will become

    14. Was this a grafted tree? If so it wont come back true, but you’ll at least have a pretty tree again in about 5 years. If its not grafted, since it has a very well established root system, it should produce again in about 3 years or so

    15. LeGrandePoobah on

      Just let it be, if it has strong roots, those shoots will grow. I would wait to see the strongest one in a month or two, and clip the other two to create a sing stem- or you can use the three growing to be your main branches as it grows. I’ve never had a stone fruit grow new shoots once the main trunk was cut. You probably have 3-5 to years to go before it fruits again. Good luck.

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