Karen,
I can swing by to pick up a sign if you have some left and appreciate the info
about the care post storm. Trees were at wits end during the storm much like us
humans.
Thank you so much.
nelly
On Jun 22, 2021, at 1:16 PM, karen mattison (Redacted sender "karonj" for
DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thank you for the message, Nelly. I contacted the city about a month ago to
ask about Oak Wilt education for our neighborhood as so many trees were
damaged and recovering. There is an online education bit for anyone
interested. Also, the city dropped off some yard signs with reminders about
tree care. Please let me know if I can put a sign in your yard.
I listened to Texas A&M program in April that was part of a conference of the
tree experts in Texas that had studied the storm damage. As a group they
concluded that the oaks need to be left alone for a year to accurately assess
the damage.
Karen
Sent from my iPad
On Jun 22, 2021, at 10:32 AM, Nelly P Ramirez (Redacted sender
"nelly.ramirez" for DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Good morning, everyone.
A periodic reminder that a lot our neighborhood trees are oaks and that
those oak trees are susceptible to oak wilt, a highly infectious disease
caused by a fungus. The neighborhood invested heavily in its deterrence in
the early 90s and for those that are newer to the neighborhood, don’t be
surprised if your neighbors mosey over to remind you about oak wilt if they
see tree trimmers out. It is incredibly difficult to stop once it takes hold
in the neighborhood as it can spread through our trees' vast root system.
Good news is that oak wilt can be avoided by trimming at times of year that
make it less susceptible and by painting over wounds and cuts immediately.
There is some variance on advice about when is best to trim, but the City of
Austin suggests trimming between July-January if you are doing periodic
maintenance trims.
I’ve attached a PDF of a door hanger with basic tips below as well as some
links to more info:
Texas Oak Wilt <https://texasoakwilt.org/>- great resource with an
introduction to oak wilt, photos, vendors, arborists, and lots of other
resources.
If These Trees Could Talk
<https://covna.org/2020/11/26/if-these-trees-could-talk/> - an awesome
documentary put together by one our neighbors, Lori, on the neighborhood’s
history and fight against oak wilt.
City of Austin Oak Wilt info site <http://austintexas.gov/page/oak-wilt>
City of Austin’s Oak Wilt Infection Map
<https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Minimalist/index.html?appid=77bd761640454639992165ca91a9a0c5>
Thanks,
nelly on toulouse
<OakWiltPruningCalendarDoorHanger.pdf>