Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scratch the bark (even on a twig) and if it is green underneath the tree is still alive. Good luck!
I decided to cut the tree down. There are no signs of life. It is a shame. It is (was) the most prominent tree on the street. It provided a lot of shape children playing in the summertime. It will be missed.
It's really unlikely that it was healthy when you moved in last fall and now it's completely dead.
Agree. Trees rarely die in one year. It is often a 5-year process unless it catches on fire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scratch the bark (even on a twig) and if it is green underneath the tree is still alive. Good luck!
I decided to cut the tree down. There are no signs of life. It is a shame. It is (was) the most prominent tree on the street. It provided a lot of shape children playing in the summertime. It will be missed.
It's really unlikely that it was healthy when you moved in last fall and now it's completely dead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scratch the bark (even on a twig) and if it is green underneath the tree is still alive. Good luck!
I decided to cut the tree down. There are no signs of life. It is a shame. It is (was) the most prominent tree on the street. It provided a lot of shape children playing in the summertime. It will be missed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scratch the bark (even on a twig) and if it is green underneath the tree is still alive. Good luck!
I decided to cut the tree down. There are no signs of life. It is a shame. It is (was) the most prominent tree on the street. It provided a lot of shape children playing in the summertime. It will be missed.
Anonymous wrote:Scratch the bark (even on a twig) and if it is green underneath the tree is still alive. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Yes, pin oak does tend to hold it leaves and the new buds push them out. It is called marcescence.
If a tree loses its leaves too early, it is a bad sign. We had a maple that turned fall colors in August and dropped all leaves by September. That tree died.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it time. Someone else mentioned mid-May.
Here is a fact sheet supporting that: https://plants.usda.gov/factsheet/pdf/fs_qupa2.pdf
Thank you. This is helpful. I will wait and keep my fingers crossed.