Greg;

We get the same damage here in Southern California, but from sunburn, not
Southwest Injury.  But the damage is the same, dead cambium layer and
sunken bark.  Besides robbing vigor from the tree, here it also attracts
borers who take advantage of the tree's inability to sap out the maggot,
and exploit the edges of the injury.  The wounds will not heal; they may
eventually be covered by cambium growing from either side, like a pruning
stump is covered over.

Bridge grafting is easier on shorter injuries like vole and rabbit damage;
the problem with SWI is that the wounds are long and narrow. Cutting the
tree off and letting a latent bud sprout may be a viable option depending
on the damage, but you will have to weigh the loss of productivity against
how long it would take if you just pruned the tree hard and let it try to
heal the SWI.  

Painting trunks white, especially with an airless sprayer, seems way less
trouble than any of this.  

Kevin Hauser
Kuffel Creek Apple Nursery
Riverside, California
Nakifuma, Uganda, East Africa

 On Sun, 16 Mar 2014 10:42:00 -0400, "Peck, Greg" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Apple-Crop participants,
> 
> Like everyone else in the Eastern half of the US, we've had a
particularly
> cold and snowy winter in Virginia. Not surprisingly, I am starting to
hear
> reports about Southwest injury to young trees. While there is a lot of
> information available on how to prevent southwest injury, I have not
been
> able to find much information on how to deal with the trunks after the
> damage has been done. Typically, growers in Virginia have do not paint
> trunks with latex paint, but many will probably reconsider that decision
in
> future years.
> 
> Many trees are probably not going to make it, but I'm wondering if
anyone
> has experience trying to save some of the less severely injured trees
with
> bridge-grafts. How about wrapping the bark with grafting tape to try to
get
> the wounds to heal? (I'm guessing that this will have a low success rate
> because the tissue has already dried out.) Depending upon how far into
the
> rootstock the split extends and the age of the tree, we might also try
> cutting off the scion and hoping an advantageous bud breaks dormancy.
> 
> Any other suggestions from those who have to deal with Southwest Injury
on
> a more annual basis?
> 
> Thanks,
> Greg
> ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
> Gregory Michael Peck, Ph.D.
> Assistant Professor of Horticulture
> Virginia Tech
> Alson H. Smith, Jr. Agricultural Research and Extension Center
> 595 Laurel Grove Road
> Winchester, VA 22602 USA
> 540/869-2560 ext 19
> [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
> arec.vaes.vt.edu/alson-h-smith
> www.anr.ext.vt.edu/tree-fruit/<http://www.anr.ext.vt.edu/tree-fruit/>
>
blogs.ext.vt.edu/tree-fruit-horticulture<http://blogs.ext.vt.edu/tree-fruit-horticulture>
> www.facebook.com/VtechPomology<http://www.facebook.com/VtechPomology>
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