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    Tree News

    Texas tree group issues dire warning to Dallas owners of oak trees

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jan 30, 2024 | 3:11 pm
    red oak tree

    Red oak tree, majestic

    The Tree Center

    A nonprofit dedicated to trees is issuing a warning to Dallas citizens who own oak trees: Put down the pruning shears.

    Homeowners and landscaping types may be tempted to do some spring pruning, but when it comes to oak trees, now is not the time.

    The reason: oak wilt, a devastating, incurable fungus that has been slowly spreading over a large part of the U.S. This tree disease is contagious and can kill an oak in as little as two weeks.

    This is why Texas Trees Foundation is urging homeowners and business owners to NOT prune oak trees after February 1, and to refrain from pruning them between February 1-June 30. (That's the time window for North Texas. In cooler parts of the country up north, it runs from March to July.)

    Do not prune unless there is an emergency, and avoid wounding your oak trees during this time.

    Oak wilt is an infectious disease caused by the fungus Bretziella fagacearum, which invades and disables the water-conducting system (xylem) in oaks. Beetles who carry the disease are attracted to bark damage or "wounds" where tree limbs have been removed.

    All oaks can be infected. However, some oak species are affected more than others.

    Most susceptible oaks
    Red oaks: Members of the red oak group, particularly Texas red oak (AKA Spanish oak), shumard oak, blackjack oak, and water oak are most susceptible to the fungus and may play a unique role in the establishment of new oak wilt infections.

    Live oak and Texas live oak are intermediate in their susceptibility to oak wilt, but are most seriously affected due to their tendency to grow with vast, interconnected root systems that allow movement of the fungus among adjacent trees.

    White oaks: Members of the white oak group include post oak, bur oak, Mexican white oak, white shin oak, durand oak, lacey oak, and chinquapin oak. Although white oaks show some tolerance of the disease, all oaks can be infected by the fungus. White shin oak, lacey oak, and chinquapin oak can grow in stands with interconnected root systems, enabling the fungus to possibly infect adjacent trees that are susceptible to the fungus.

    How to detect oak wilt
    Foliar symptoms, patterns of tree mortality, and the presence of fungal mats can be used as indicators of oak wilt. However, laboratory isolation of the fungus is recommended to confirm the diagnosis. A certified arborist should be contacted when in doubt.

    Foliar (leaf) symptoms on live oaks include:

    • Yellow veins. Leaves on diseased live oaks often develop chlorotic (yellow) veins that eventually turn necrotic (brown), a symptom called veinal necrosis. The most commonly seen foliar symptom on live oaks infected with oak wilt.
    • Vein banding. Vein banding is where the leaf vein is a darker green than the rest of the leaf.
    • Tip burn or margin burn, which turns the edges of the leaf brown.

    Defoliation may be rapid, and dead leaves with brown veins often can be found under the tree for months after defoliation.

    Patterns of tree mortality: Most live oaks defoliate and die within 3 to 6 months following initial appearance of symptoms. Some live oaks take longer to die, and a few untreated trees may survive many years in various stages of decline. Occasionally, a few live oaks in an oak wilt center may escape infection and remain unaffected by the disease.

    Red oaks never survive oak wilt and often die within 4 to 6 weeks following the initial appearance of symptoms. During summer months, diseased red oaks can often be spotted from a distance because of their bright, autumn-like coloration in contrast to the surrounding greenery. This symptom is called flagging. So sad.

    How to manage oak wilt
    Awareness is important when identifying oak wilt. There are four primary approaches used for oak wilt management in Texas:

    • Prevent the formation of new oak wilt infection centers by eliminating diseased red oaks, handling firewood properly, proper timing of pruning, and painting wounds on healthy oaks.
    • Trenching or other measures to disrupt root connections responsible for root transmission of the pathogen.
    • Injection of the fungicide propiconazole into individual, high-value trees to help reduce crown loss and extend the life of the tree.
    • Plant other tree species to create diversity in the landscape and to mitigate the impact of oak wilt.

    Successful control usually depends on an integrated program incorporating measures from all four approaches. These measures will not cure oak wilt but can significantly reduce tree losses.

    How to slow the spread of oak wilt
    Regardless of season, immediately paint all pruning cuts and other wounds to oaks. Any kind of wound dressing or paint can be used, and all are equally effective at preventing infections from fungal spores when applied immediately.

    To repeat: Avoid pruning or wounding oaks from February 1-June 30.

    Debris from diseased red oaks should be immediately chipped, burned, or buried.

    When to prune
    The least hazardous periods for pruning are during the coldest days in winter and extended hot periods in mid to late summer. The best time to prune oaks is during late fall.

    Proper pruning techniques should always be used. These include making proper pruning cuts and avoiding injurious practices such as topping or excessive crown thinning. As a general guideline for pruning, clean all pruning tools with 10 percent bleach solution or Lysol between sites and/or trees.

    The Texas Trees Foundation is a nonprofit tree planting organization dedicated to greening North Central Texas. Established in 1982, the Texas Trees Foundation manages the nation’s largest non-profit urban tree farm and plants trees on public property.

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    Housing market trends

    Dallas-area housing market tilts toward buyers as mortgage rates climb

    Associated Press
    Apr 6, 2026 | 2:18 pm
    Home for sale house for sale
    Courtesy photo
    undefined

    The economic fallout from the war with Iran is driving up the cost of buying a home, even as other housing market trends in many parts of the country favor home shoppers this spring.

    Mortgage rates have been rising since the war began, as surging energy prices heighten worries about higher inflation, pushing up the yield on U.S. 10-year Treasury bonds, which lenders use as a guide to pricing home loans.

    As recently as the last week of February, the average rate on a 30-year mortgage dropped to just under 6%, its lowest level in more than three and a half years. It climbed this week to 6.46%, its highest level in nearly seven months.

    The conflict is also injecting more uncertainty into the U.S. economic outlook at a time when the job market is sputtering.

    While rates are still down from a year ago, their recent upward trend has already led to a slowdown in mortgage applications. Further increases threaten to put a damper on home sales during what’s traditionally the busiest time of the year for the housing market.

    “The war in Iran has seriously complicated the spring buying season,” said Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com. “I expect that many buyers will be put off by rising rates and mounting economic uncertainty, choosing to bide their time rather than jumping on board for a purchase before rates go up.”

    Home shoppers who can afford to buy at current mortgage rates this spring are likely to find a more buyer-friendly housing market than this time last year. That means they'll have more leverage when negotiating with sellers, who in many cases are watching their property go unsold for weeks, potentially making them more willing to lower their initial asking price or offer buyers money for closing costs, repairs or other concessions in order to get a deal done, real estate agents say.

    In the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, lower listing prices and more homes on the market are forcing many sellers to price their home more competitively or consider offering some incentives to land a buyer, said Matthew Crites, an agent with Coldwell Banker Realty.

    “It’s been a really good buyer’s market to kind of start the year off with,” he said.

    The trends helped give home shopper Anne King a strong hand when she set her sights on a three-bedroom, two-bath ranch-style house in Fort Worth listed at $275,000.

    The contract administrator offered $10,000 below the listing price. She also asked that the seller kick in $5,000 toward closing costs. The seller accepted, and later agreed to throw in another $12,000 for repairs after a home inspection revealed roof damage.

    “Fortunately for me, the seller was in a position they needed to sell,” said King, 57. The purchase was finalized in late February, just before the start of the conflict in the Middle East.

    King had hoped mortgage rates would ease further before she bought the home, but decided it made sense to buy sooner, rather than risk having to compete this spring against more homebuyers who could potentially trigger a bidding war -- something she experienced last May when she bought a two-bedroom, two-bath townhouse in Arlington.

    She locked in a 6% rate on her mortgage and plans to refinance to a lower rate whenever rates drop.

    “I feel like I got a good deal on this property, and that’s all that matters,” she said.

    Home shoppers gain more leverage
    While the inventory of homes for sale nationally is still low by historical standards, active listings — a tally that encompasses all homes on the market except those pending a finalized sale — jumped nearly 8% in February from a year earlier, according to data from Realtor.com.

    The increase varies across the U.S., with the West, Midwest and South far outpacing the Northeast. Still, some 43 of the 50 largest metro areas had more homes for sale in February than a year earlier, with listings up between 10% and 38.5% in many markets, including Seattle, Indianapolis, Las Vegas and Houston and Denver.

    As homes take longer to sell, prices have started falling. The median listing price was down in February from a year earlier in just over half of the nation’s biggest 50 metro areas, including a nearly 9% drop in Austin and Memphis, and declines of more than 5% in Washington D.C., San Diego and Los Angeles.

    In another sign that buyers may have the edge negotiating with sellers this spring, an analysis by Redfin estimates that there were about 46% more sellers than prospective buyers in the market nationally in February. That’s up from about 30% a year earlier and represents the largest gap between buyers and sellers on records going back to 2013, according to Redfin.

    Miami, Nashville and Austin are among the metro areas where sellers most outnumber buyers, Redfin found.

    A buyer's market, if you can afford it
    The U.S. housing market has been in a sales slump since 2022, when mortgage rates began to climb from pandemic-era lows. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes were essentially flat last year, stuck at a 30-year low. They have remained sluggish so far this year, declining in January and February versus a year earlier.

    While the pace of home price growth has slowed or fallen in many metro areas, affordability hurdles remain daunting for many aspiring homebuyers because wage growth has not kept up with home prices.

    Consider, the median price of an existing home sold in February was $398,000, according to the National Association of Realtors. That's nearly five times the median household income. A historic rule of thumb was that homes generally cost three times the household income.

    The recent increase in mortgage rates adds slightly to the affordability challenge. On a $400,000 home near downtown Dallas, for example, factoring in a 20% down payment and a 30-year mortgage at 6%, the buyer’s monthly payment would be about $2,248. At a 6.4% rate, that payment would climb to $2,331.

    And while mortgage rates are still lower than a year ago, making monthly payments more manageable, rates are still much higher than the sub-3% averages available to homebuyers during most of 2020 and 2021 as the weakened economy dealt with the coronavirus pandemic and its aftermath.

    Sellers under pressure
    The housing market has cooled considerably since earlier this decade, when rock-bottom mortgage rates set off a frenzy that sent home prices soaring. Back then, it wasn’t uncommon for a home to fetch well above the seller’s asking price after receiving offers from multiple buyers.

    While some sellers are still receiving multiple offers now, it’s far from the norm.

    Jo Chavez, a Redfin agent in Kansas City, tells clients looking to sell to expect that their home probably won’t sell right away. She also advises them to be “reasonable” with how they price their home.

    “We have a lot of sellers who have that idea of like, ‘well, my neighbors sold for this much, and so I think I should price $10,000 above them,’” said Chavez. “And that’s obviously not a logical approach, because there were less sales last year.”

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