Will my Royal Frost Birch make it?

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animefangz

animefangz

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ray benson
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Found this bit of info -
If the tree bark damage is greater than 50%, the life of the tree is at risk. You should call a tree care professional to help you with repairing the damage.
If the tree is damaged around 100% of the tree, this is called girdling. It is very difficult to save a tree with this much damage and the tree will most likely die. A tree care professional may try a method called repair grafting to bridge the gap in the bark and allow the tree to live long enough to repair itself.
 
animefangz

animefangz

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Bridge grafting would probably be the only possibility. Here's how you do it:
bridge grafting apple trees in Washington State - YouTube

Where do I get the suckers from? Do I have to use the same branches as the birch tree I have? (There aren't any others around...so could I use the branches it grew from this year?) Last but not least, do I have to nail it? It's fairly young and idk if the nail would go straight through. Also, do they have to be special nails, or will any nails do. (He said grafting nails and idk if that's a thing, or if he just called them that because that's what he was going to use it for.)
 
Ed Roland

Ed Roland

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Very young tree with obvious vigor. Ensure optimum cultural practices and watch it overgrow the defect. I would expose the root flare and remove debris from around the wound to aid closure.

Trees Are Good
 
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