Hi @danaya
Thanks for your question. Oh, what a shame that you've ended up with a situation where you're trying to seal off a tree's wound or hole. I wish you'd gotten in touch sooner. If anything, this sealant is more likely to kill or poison the tree than any wildlife or insect burrowing into its trunk.
Many things will make their home in plants, trees and shrubs by pecking holes or burrowing. However, most won't kill the tree. Please hold off any more chemical treatments or sealants, as you run the risk of poisoning or suffocating the tree, which is far worse! I never advise sealing any wounds on trees from pruning or damage. Sealants cause more problems than they solve, and plants/trees will happily seal their own wounds, whereas paints and sealants leave them open and stop them from lignifying and sealing properly.
As for cutting back beneath the cut, there is no need; the tree looks healthy and like it will recover, especially if it's in leaf. Cutting any apple tree back hard will spur on sideways growth, not vertical growth, and therefore it may end up in a mangled, deformed shape and hard to both manage and harvest with branches dragging on the ground.
https://youtu.be/DFdcQU8sNx8
I'd I were you, I'd leave the tree well alone and just make sure it's well watered in any heat waves this year. Fingers crossed that your fruit tree survives.
All the best
Lee Garden Ninja
Hi @danaya
Thanks for your question. Oh, what a shame that you've ended up with a situation where you're trying to seal off a tree's wound or hole. I wish you'd gotten in touch sooner. If anything, this sealant is more likely to kill or poison the tree than any wildlife or insect burrowing into its trunk.
Many things will make their home in plants, trees and shrubs by pecking holes or burrowing. However, most won't kill the tree. Please hold off any more chemical treatments or sealants, as you run the risk of poisoning or suffocating the tree, which is far worse! I never advise sealing any wounds on trees from pruning or damage. Sealants cause more problems than they solve, and plants/trees will happily seal their own wounds, whereas paints and sealants leave them open and stop them from lignifying and sealing properly.
As for cutting back beneath the cut, there is no need; the tree looks healthy and like it will recover, especially if it's in leaf. Cutting any apple tree back hard will spur on sideways growth, not vertical growth, and therefore it may end up in a mangled, deformed shape and hard to both manage and harvest with branches dragging on the ground.
I'd I were you, I'd leave the tree well alone and just make sure it's well watered in any heat waves this year. Fingers crossed that your fruit tree survives.
All the best
Lee Garden Ninja