Shady's Latest Dumbassary

Took stock of the tropicals and a few others today. Summer has not been kind to my trees this year. Week-long or more bouts above 100F, grasshoppers so bad their manure is a problem at times, and I haven't been in the greatest place mentally (mostly just world-weary, and coming out the other side already) so not paying attention like I should.
Upside, it's trimmed my burdensome collection down to what's most manageable, and I'm grateful for that. Nothing worse than your hobbies becoming a stressor.

Had to cut back all the hibiscus. Wish I could remember which one was the ruffled flowers.
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Stuck a few cuttings, maybe make a couple bucks for Christmas selling them.

I think I'm going to do a BIG chop on my tall gardenia (forgot to get current pics) get it heading in a bonsai direction. The little ones just pulled through summer, and need separated. They seem to be more temperamental in my climate, so not going to push them too hard.

@Colorado may be interested to know that this ginkgo I got from him, which had never branches out before, is finally behaving like a tree.
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An emergency repot in spring must have done it some good.

Unfortunately, @Carol 83, of all the cutting and such you've sent me, this little bougainvillea is about all that's withstood everything.
But DAMN is it a little trooper! Dried out, came back; eaten to the ground by grasshoppers, came back; tumbled off the bench and spilt everywhere, came back.
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It's the little bougie that could!
 
Of all the trees, I've somehow killed a Siberian elm. A shame, too, since it was starting to develop some character in the trunk and we'll distributed branching. Was looking at a chop soon.
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No sign of pests or disease. Only other thing I can think of is it stayed a bit too wet, but there's no sign of root rot.
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Of all the trees, I've somehow killed a Siberian elm. A shame, too, since it was starting to develop some character in the trunk and we'll distributed branching. Was looking at a chop soon.
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No sign of pests or disease. Only other thing I can think of is it stayed a bit too wet, but there's no sign of root rot.
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Sorry to see. Looks like it may have been too dry? Missed a watering maybe?
 
Sorry to see. Looks like it may have been too dry? Missed a watering maybe?
The way this summer was, probably a bit of both.
On single parent time, so everything is on a water timer. Depending on tims, coverage and weather, everything was always either too wet or too dry. When I first noticed it looking sad it was very very wet, so I adjusted it's location under the sprinkler to a little drier. Didn't make a difference.
The Chinese elm in the same size pot, same soil, and generally same location doesn't seem to have suffered so much.
 
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