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Posted

Thanks David, that certainly sounds like the one - in looks and feel!

 

Its taken quite a foothold on the tree in question, do you know if there are any steps that can be taken to protect the tree?

Posted

The tree (at least sections of it) is in decline.

The tripe is making use of the dysfunctional wood volumes.

 

It's a slow decayer in my experience but may (probably will) lead to failure of structural sections eventually.

 

What are the targets?

 

 

.

Posted

Even if you do get a partial collapse of the structure - dont be in a hurry to clear it up if it can be avoided (depends on garden size).

 

Mature apple are excellent at self-layering (a bit like this but if you imagine the branch on the ground has arrived there due to a failure), so as long as there is space, if the tree ends up on the floor, with a bit of soil around the lower bough, you can very quickly have another tree growing quite fast, so no overall loss to the garden.

 

But, of course, this approach may not suit some people's gardens.

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