Hi Dave ( from Istria) Late air will do this. It will also cause distortion in 
the leaves when they do get goingPaul


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-------- Original message --------From: D BANGS <bangs...@btinternet.com> Date: 
04/05/2017  09:15  (GMT+00:00) To: Adastra discussion group 
<adastra@lists.sxbrc.org.uk> Subject: [Adastra] dead trees, 
nightingales...dying nature 
Walking in the Cowfold Stream valley east of Crateman's Farm and to the south 
to listen to the Nightingales last night we passed lines of oaks with  brown 
withered crowns. Often the whole foliage of fresh tender leaves and catkins was 
withered brown, but sometimes the top of the crown was still green. 

Amongst them the Ashes, which are co-dominant in this Wealden Clay landscape, 
had stayed as dead as winter...almost every one. 

It was not  a scene of coppery/golden spring leaf green as it had been a few 
weeks ago, but  a scene of death.

We have noticed how strong the hold of Ash Die Back is in this area since last 
year and this spring, but the sight of the oaks, now, was dreadful.

Is this just water stress from the drought ? The Stream was flowing and in 
reasonably good water. I did not notice that the Oaks in the shaws on our walk 
in to the Stream were affected.

It feels like the ending of the world

Dave Bangs


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