


Thanks John
John, that looks like one of my old radiata pines I sold about 15 years ago. Do you remember where you purchased it ?John Henry wrote:Thanks Mojo,as in all my trees i add a small amount of native osmocoate when re potting then water in with a weak mix of seasol and have never had problems . At the same time of repotting i also repotted two radiatas in the only remaining mix containing Maidenwell diatomite they are both going gang busters.![]()
Grant, I wouldnt consider a few weeks ago as being too quick. Symptoms of Dothistroma can develop very rapidly, within days especially with the right conditions. Besides, judging from the photos, the newest growth at the end of the branches seem to be the last to be infected. No-one needs to agree with me, however I can only judge from the photos which people can draw from their own conclusions. But from my experience looks convincingly like dothistroma.NBPCA wrote:Hi all,
I saw Johns trees just a few weeks ago and they all looked fine with no indication of Dothistroma anywhere in the yard.
I think the damage to the new growth is too quick for it to be Dothistroma but another fungal or root problem after a cool wet period might be the cumulative culprit.
Grant