Is my tree sick?
My tree has a wet-looking spot at its base that hasn't been drying properly for a few days. What could it be? The liquid feels like water and has no odor.
My tree has a wet-looking spot at its base that hasn't been drying properly for a few days. What could it be? The liquid feels like water and has no odor.
I'm 20 and female. I often have trouble breathing, especially through my nose, so I went to the doctor two days ago. I had to blow through it, and the test showed 91%. Now I'm worried. I'm not fat, but I do weigh a little more than I should, and I don't exercise much. My…
Hey, I've been feeling like I have a fever since last night. I just checked my temperature and found out that I do have a fever. But I'm just a little cold, and I don't have a headache. When I take a deep breath, I have a cough. And my throat is dry, too. What…
I've been keeping a male betta alone in a 30-liter tank for about a month now. He often swims around the tank and is very active. He eats normally, and the temperature is fine (between 25-27 degrees Celsius), but sometimes he lies on the bottom (see picture) or on a large leaf. Does this mean…
Good evening, so here it is, I haven't been to the toilet for 5 days, now I am and I'm pushing really hard, it feels like feces, but a lot of farts are coming out and it's extremely hard, I wanted to ask if it's maybe my bowel etc., I have zero pain or any…
I (f/14) have been experiencing mild to moderate stomach pain after every meal for the past three days. I don't remember eating anything bad, and I had my period a week ago. What could be causing this?
Hello Maximilian,
let the stability of the tree be checked by a gardener.
He can tell you exactly where the problem is.
Being the tree is sick, you stand in liability when a damage arises.
LG
It is probably a fungal infection. Let a tree-suspended person come up for safe identification and risk mitigation (cores, stability) and follow his recommendation to reduce risks
Hello,
It’s hard to see the tree. For example, a rather old, strong hain book would be conceivable.
In any case there is a more or less large, more or less well overwalled cavity with connection to the outside. The formation of this hollow space is thus also not recognizable: it can be an overgrown injury/fauling point, but also simply a “steel” which is almost closed due to the thickness growth, a recess of the round stem cross section. Especially in the tree type Hainbuche with its “shock-back” growth and especially in the area of the root start, something is more common. And with a longer rainy weather, such a cavity can fill with water that runs along the trunk. If the cavity is full, it’s going out.
Whether the stability of the tree is restricted, it is not possible to recognize in this picture. Maybe, but not sure. Remove wood at this point I wouldn’t be on the basis of this picture. This would weaken the, possibly completely healthy strain and create an entrance gate for fowls. If you want to go safe, then someone who knows should look at the tree.
The wood has died at this point. It would make sense to remove it before it spreads out.
This is not, in my knowledge, untypical for sick trees, which already have cavities or rotten wood inside, that in rain sucks like a sponge and then later this water emerges somewhere…