Hello,
I'm interested to know if anyone might have perspective on what might be ailing an Indian Free and a Redhaven peach tree I purchased this past spring.
I'm in the midst of a conversation with the nursery and despite positive
experience in the past with customer service this year, this conversation is leaving me questioning the integrity of their nursery and their reply to the situation.
I believe these
trees arrived somewhat compromised, healthwise. They had suckers and what looked like winter burn or some rot dieback from pruning cuts made a bit too high above the bud. They both also had quite a bit of gummosis on their main trunks . There's one photo from the spring I've attached.
I also attached a couple photos of the trees from the summer and from this fall which show the further development of the gummosis which I believe I have diagnosed as Cytospora canker. I don't see pieces of sawdust or bark mixed in the sap as if it was from insect or mechanical damage. I'm pretty sure of this. I also attached some photos of the trees from the fall. The damage on both of them is pretty extensive, but worse so on the Indian Free peach. Although it's not the highest resolution image, you can see from the pics of it in the summer that the canker was already inches long and girdling the main trunk.
The nursery I purchased the trees from wrote the following to me after I emailed them about my trees:
"Peaches can be cut back extensively so I'd just cut the areas you're concerned about. I don't think it's canker. It may be healed, but to make sure just cut below it."
Considering that if I prune the Indian Free back below the damage, I would be left with about .25 inches about the graft union, I'm wondering why I paid $35 plus $8 shipping for a tree that had so few inches of viable scion
wood on it.
If I do this with the red haven ($25+$8 shipping),
I'll be left with some viable scion wood.
Thank you so very much for your time and perspective, any assistance with diagnosis or treatment or if I
should be asking for replacements.