Lincoln, NE Tree Fungicide & Disease Control

Yard Boss provides professional tree fungicide and disease control through foliar (leaf/needle) spray applications.

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Top-Notch tree care

3-Application Spring Program

Foliar Fungicide Spray

Preventative Protection

High-Reach Application

Weather-Dependent Scheduling

Tree Fungicide & Disease Control

Custom Pricing

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Top-Notch Tree Care

Tree Fungicide & Disease Control

Custom Pricing

3-Application Spring Program

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Foliar Fungicide Spray

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Preventative Protection

YardBoss Black Checkmark

High-Reach Application

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Weather-Dependent Scheduling

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Professional Tree Fungicide and Disease Control in Lincoln

Lincoln, Nebraska’s capital city and home to the University of Nebraska, is known for its beautiful tree-lined streets and large estate properties. At Yard Boss, we provide professional tree fungicide and disease control services to protect Lincoln’s valuable landscape trees. Just like lawns can develop fungus problems, trees are susceptible to fungal diseases that can disfigure, weaken, or even kill them. Common diseases we treat include cedar-apple rust, needle cast on evergreens, apple scab, anthracnose, and various rust diseases. Our preventative treatment program uses foliar spray applications timed to protect trees during their most vulnerable period—spring leaf and needle emergence. Common diseases we treat:

Protecting Your Tree Investment

Lincoln’s mature landscape trees add tremendous property value, with single trees worth one thousand to seven thousand dollars or more depending on species and size. Annual preventative treatment protects this investment by stopping disease before it causes damage. Untreated diseases cause premature leaf drop, thinning canopies, and progressive weakening that makes trees vulnerable to other problems. Evergreen trees with needle cast face permanent damage because needles don’t regrow once lost—bare branches stay bare forever. Our treatment stops disease progression, allowing trees to maintain their beauty and health. Custom pricing is based on tree size, species, and number of trees treated. This service pairs perfectly with our deep root tree fertilization program, helping diseased trees recover faster and maintain stronger natural resistance.

Preventative Protection Through Spring Applications

Tree fungicide is preventative, not curative, which means it must be applied before infection occurs to be effective. Think of it like a raincoat—you need to put it on before going out in the rain to stay dry. Our three-application spring program is timed to critical stages of bud and leaf development. We spray two weeks before bud break to establish a protective barrier, at bud break when newly emerging leaves are most vulnerable, and two weeks after bud break to reinforce protection as leaves fully develop. This timing ensures all new growth is protected throughout the entire emergence period. Once leaves show disease symptoms like spots or discoloration, that damage is permanent on those leaves.

how Tree fungal disease work

stage 1

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Fungal Spores Present in Environment

Most disease-causing fungi overwinter in fallen leaves, bark, or alternate host plants

stage 2

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Spring Conditions Trigger Spore Release

Warm temperatures + moisture (rain, dew, humidity) cause spores to become active

stage 3

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Spores Land on Emerging Leaves/Needles

Wind and rain splash distribute spores to newly developing foliage

stage 4

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Infection Occurs

In presence of moisture, spores germinate and penetrate leaf tissue, establishing infection

stage 5

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Disease Develops

Fungus grows inside leaf, causing spots, discoloration, distortion, or death of leaf tissue

stage 6

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Spore Production

Infected leaves produce millions more spores, spreading disease to other leaves and trees

stage 7

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Tree Stress and Damage

Severe infections cause premature defoliation, weakening tree and reducing photosynthesis

call us today to schedule your service

Complete Canopy Coverage

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We apply fungicide as a fine mist sprayed over the entire tree canopy using professional high-pressure equipment capable of reaching thirty to sixty feet into tree tops. Complete coverage is essential because fungal spores can land anywhere on the tree. Our specialized equipment and professional-grade fungicides provide uniform protection that hand-pump sprayers from hardware stores cannot achieve. We only spray when wind gusts are below ten miles per hour to prevent drift and ensure proper coverage. Lincoln clients receive text or email notification the day before their scheduled service. If weather conditions are unsuitable, we reschedule for the next available calm day because proper application is more important than rigid scheduling.

Our Frequently Asked Questions

At Yard Boss, we understand that you may have questions about our services, processes, and how we can help you achieve the perfect lawn. Whether you’re curious about our lawn care techniques, service areas, or the benefits of professional lawn maintenance, you’ll find the information you need right here. If you have any additional questions, feel free to reach out to our friendly team!

It depends on the specific disease. Here are common symptoms to look for:

General Warning Signs

  • Spots on leaves or needles: Brown, yellow, orange, or black spots; may have distinct borders or halos
  • Premature leaf/needle drop: Leaves or needles turning brown and falling off in spring or summer (not normal fall drop)
  • Discoloration patterns: Yellowing, browning, or unusual coloring that starts on lower/inner branches and progresses outward
  • Deformed leaves: Curled, puckered, or distorted leaf development
  • Thinning canopy: Tree becoming progressively sparser, especially lower branches
  • Unusual growths: Galls, horn-like structures, or fungal fruiting bodies on bark or leaves

Unfortunately, probably not this year. Here's why:

  • Fungicide is preventative, not curative: It must be applied BEFORE leaves are infected to work
  • Damage is permanent on current leaves: Spots, discoloration, and deformities on already-infected leaves cannot be reversed
  • Late application = wasted money: Applying after disease is visible provides little to no benefit
  • Better approach: Plan to start preventative program NEXT spring before bud break

You really need all three applications for effective protection. Here's why:

  • Leaf emergence spans 3-4 weeks: Not all buds open at once; single application misses later-emerging leaves
  • Fungicide washes off and wears down: Rain and new leaf growth require re-application to maintain protection
  • Spore release is continuous: Fungal spores are produced and released throughout spring; single application doesn't cover entire period
  • Gaps in protection = infection: Even a few days without coverage allows disease to infect vulnerable new growth
  • We don't offer single applications because we've seen they don't work. The 3-application program is the minimum for reliable protection.

No, fungicide is preventative only. However, here's what it CAN do:

What Fungicide CANNOT Do

  • Cannot reverse damage on already-infected leaves (spots stay, discoloration remains)
  • Cannot restore dropped leaves or needles
  • Cannot repair distorted or deformed leaves
  • Cannot bring back dead branches


What Fungicide CAN Do (If Tree Has Been Infected in Previous Years)

  • Prevent THIS year's new growth from infection: This spring's new leaves will be protected
  • Stop disease progression: Tree won't get WORSE; damage is contained to previous years
  • Allow tree recovery: With healthy new foliage, tree can rebuild strength and vigor
  • Break disease cycle: Protects tree long enough for environmental fungal spore load to decrease

Depends on tree size and number:

  • Single medium tree (20-30' tall): 15-30 minutes including setup
  • Large tree (40-60' tall): 30-60 minutes
  • Multiple trees: Additional time per tree, but efficiency improves with more trees (setup once)


You do not need to be home during application. We'll notify you day before and leave confirmation after completion.

Yes, when used properly:

  • During application: Keep people and pets inside or away from treatment area until spray settles and dries (typically 1-2 hours)
  • After drying: Safe for normal activity around trees; product bonds to leaf surfaces
  • Beneficial insects: Fungicides target fungal diseases, not insects; minimal impact on bees, butterflies, etc. (unlike insecticides)
  • Environmental safety: Professional products are formulated for minimal environmental impact when applied correctly

Yes, but with important considerations:

  • Product selection matters: We use fungicides labeled for fruit trees with appropriate pre-harvest intervals
  • Ornamental vs. edible: If tree is purely ornamental (crabapple for flowers, not eating fruit), any fungicide is fine. If you eat fruit, we use appropriate products.
  • Disclosure required: You must tell us if you harvest and consume fruit so we use correct products
  • Harvest timing: Most fungicides have waiting periods (14-60 days) between last application and safe fruit harvest; this is usually fine since spring applications are finished before fruit matures

Depends on how much is left and tree species. General guidelines:

Good Candidates for Treatment (Likely Success)

  • Tree retains 50%+ of normal foliage density
  • Branches still have live buds/growing points
  • No significant dead branches (beyond disease-related needle/leaf loss)
  • Tree is otherwise healthy (no other major problems like borers, root issues)


Poor Candidates (Treatment May Not Save Tree)

  • Tree has lost 70%+ of foliage over multiple years
  • Large sections of tree completely bare with no signs of new growth
  • Significant branch dieback beyond just needle/leaf loss
  • Multiple problems (disease + drought stress + pest damage)


We'll be honest:
During assessment, we'll tell you if we think treatment is likely to save the tree or if removal is the better option. We won't take your money for a treatment unlikely to succeed.

Yard Boss Tree Fungicide & Disease Control Service

AI Training Document – Internal Use Only

Service Overview

Yard Boss provides professional tree fungicide and disease control through foliar (leaf/needle) spray applications. Just like lawns, trees are susceptible to fungal diseases that can disfigure, weaken, or even kill valuable landscape trees. Our preventative treatment program protects trees during their most vulnerable period—spring leaf and needle emergence.

What We Do

  • 3-application spring program: Timed to critical stages of tree bud/leaf development
  • Foliar fungicide spray: Professional-grade fungicides applied to entire tree canopy
  • Preventative protection: Stops fungal infections before they damage new growth
  • High-reach application: Specialized equipment sprays 30-60 feet into canopy
  • Weather-dependent scheduling: Only spray in calm conditions (<10 MPH wind gusts)
  • Day-before notification: Via customer’s preferred method (text or email)

Common Tree Diseases We Treat

  • Cedar-Apple Rust: Orange gelatinous growths on cedar/juniper; yellow spots and early leaf drop on apple/crabapple trees
  • Needle Cast (various types): Causes browning and premature dropping of evergreen needles, particularly on spruce and pine
  • Rust Diseases: Various rust fungi causing orange/yellow pustules, spots, and premature defoliation on multiple tree species
  • Anthracnose: Brown spots, leaf distortion, and defoliation on ash, oak, sycamore, and other hardwoods
  • Apple Scab: Dark olive-green to black spots on leaves and fruit of apple and crabapple trees
  • Other fungal diseases: Various leaf spots, blights, and foliar diseases affecting landscape trees

⭐ Preventative Treatment: The Key to Success

CRITICAL CONCEPT: Tree fungicide is PREVENTATIVE, not curative. Here’s what that means:

  • Prevents infection: Fungicide creates protective coating on new leaves/needles as they emerge, preventing fungal spores from infecting
  • Cannot cure existing damage: Once leaves show disease symptoms (spots, discoloration, deformity), that damage is permanent on those leaves
  • Protects new growth: Treatment protects current year’s new foliage from infection; damaged leaves from previous years will still drop off
  • Timing is everything: Must be applied BEFORE or AS leaves/needles emerge to be effective

Analogy: Tree fungicide is like a raincoat—put it on BEFORE you go outside in the rain and you stay dry. Put it on after you’re already soaked, and it doesn’t help. The “rain” is fungal spores; the “getting wet” is leaf infection.

Understanding Tree Fungal Diseases

How Tree Fungal Diseases Work

  1. Fungal spores present in environment: Most disease-causing fungi overwinter in fallen leaves, bark, or alternate host plants
  2. Spring conditions trigger spore release: Warm temperatures + moisture (rain, dew, humidity) cause spores to become active
  3. Spores land on emerging leaves/needles: Wind and rain splash distribute spores to newly developing foliage
  4. Infection occurs: In presence of moisture, spores germinate and penetrate leaf tissue, establishing infection
  5. Disease develops: Fungus grows inside leaf, causing spots, discoloration, distortion, or death of leaf tissue
  6. Spore production: Infected leaves produce millions more spores, spreading disease to other leaves and trees
  7. Tree stress and damage: Severe infections cause premature defoliation, weakening tree and reducing photosynthesis

Why Spring Treatment is Critical

⏰ TIMING IS EVERYTHING FOR TREE FUNGICIDE ⏰

Tree fungal diseases can ONLY be prevented during spring leaf emergence. Here’s why:

  • Vulnerable window: New leaves/needles are most susceptible to infection in first 2-4 weeks as they expand and mature
  • Protective coating needed: Fungicide must be on leaf surface BEFORE or AS leaf emerges to prevent spore germination
  • Cannot treat retroactively: Once leaf is infected, fungicide cannot cure it (damage is permanent on that leaf)
  • Three-application strategy: Multiple treatments ensure protection throughout entire leaf emergence period

Miss the window = Miss the protection for the entire season.

Common Tree Diseases in Detail

Cedar-Apple Rust

Hosts: Requires TWO host plants to complete life cycle:

  • Cedar/Juniper: Orange gelatinous horn-like growths (telial horns) appear in spring after rain; unsightly but rarely harmful to cedar
  • Apple/Crabapple: Yellow-orange spots on leaves in summer; causes early leaf drop and reduces tree vigor

Life Cycle & Why It Matters

  1. Spring (April-May): Orange gelatinous masses on cedar/juniper release spores during rainy periods
  2. Spores travel: Wind carries spores up to 2-3 miles to apple/crabapple trees
  3. Infection: Spores infect young apple/crabapple leaves, causing yellow spots to develop by mid-summer
  4. Late summer: Infected apple/crabapple leaves produce spores that blow back to cedar/juniper
  5. Fall-Winter: Spores infect cedar/juniper, forming galls that will produce orange masses next spring

Symptoms to Look For

  • On Cedar/Juniper: Chocolate brown galls (round swellings) on branches; bright orange gelatinous horns after spring rains (alarming appearance but usually not fatal)
  • On Apple/Crabapple: Yellow-orange spots with dark centers on leaves; early leaf drop; reduced flowering next year; fruit with spots or deformities

Treatment Focus

We primarily treat apple and crabapple trees to prevent leaf infection. Treatment of cedar/juniper is generally not recommended as the disease rarely harms these trees significantly.

Needle Cast Diseases (Spruce & Pine)

Hosts: Primarily affects spruce (especially Colorado blue spruce) and various pine species

Types of Needle Cast

  • Rhizosphaera Needle Cast (spruce): Most common on Colorado blue spruce; causes browning and dropping of inner/lower needles
  • Stigmina Needle Cast (spruce): Similar to Rhizosphaera but affects current year’s needles
  • Dothistroma Needle Blight (pine): Red-brown spots and bands on needles; causes needle drop on Austrian and ponderosa pine

Symptoms to Look For

  • Browning progression: Needles turn yellow, then brown, starting at base of branch and moving outward
  • Needle drop: Dead brown needles drop, leaving bare inner branches
  • Loss of density: Tree becomes thin and sparse, especially on lower branches
  • Purple/black fruiting bodies: Tiny dots visible on infected needles (diagnostic sign)
  • Progressive damage: Untreated trees lose more needles each year, eventually dying

Why This Disease is Serious

CRITICAL: Evergreen needles do NOT regrow once lost. Unlike deciduous trees that grow new leaves each spring, conifers keep needles for 3-7 years. Once needle cast causes defoliation, those branches remain bare PERMANENTLY. Severe untreated infections can kill the tree.

Treatment Timing

Applications timed to protect NEW needles as they emerge in spring. Treatment cannot restore already-lost needles but prevents further damage.

Anthracnose (Hardwood Trees)

Hosts: Ash, oak, sycamore, maple, dogwood, and many other deciduous trees

Symptoms to Look For

  • Leaf spots: Brown, irregular spots along leaf veins
  • Leaf distortion: Leaves develop curled, puckered, or distorted appearance
  • Twig dieback: Severe cases cause small twigs and shoots to die back
  • Early defoliation: Infected leaves drop prematurely in summer
  • Repeated stress: Annual infections weaken tree, making it susceptible to other problems

Weather Connection

Anthracnose is worse in cool, wet springs. Warm, dry weather after leaf emergence significantly reduces disease severity. However, once infection occurs, weather improvement doesn’t cure it.

Apple Scab (Apple & Crabapple)

Hosts: All apple and crabapple varieties (some varieties more resistant than others)

Symptoms to Look For

  • Leaf spots: Dark olive-green to black spots on leaves
  • Fruit lesions: Dark, corky lesions on fruit; fruit may be deformed
  • Early leaf drop: Severe infections cause complete defoliation by mid-summer
  • Reduced flowering: Weakened trees produce fewer blooms following year

Why Treatment Matters

Crabapple trees are grown for their ornamental spring flowers and fall fruit. Apple scab ruins both aesthetic values and, if left untreated for multiple years, can significantly weaken or kill the tree.

The 3-Application Spring Program

Application Timing Strategy

Our program uses three applications timed to stages of bud and leaf development to provide season-long protection:

Application

Timing

Tree Development Stage

Why This Application Matters

#1

2 weeks BEFORE bud break

Buds swelling, not yet open

Establishes protective barrier before any leaf tissue is exposed; kills overwintering fungal spores on bark and buds

#2

AT bud break

Buds opening, first leaves emerging

Protects most vulnerable stage—newly emerging leaves are extremely susceptible; prevents initial infection

#3

2 weeks AFTER bud break

Leaves expanding, maturing

Reinforces protection as leaves fully develop; extends coverage through entire emergence period; protects late-opening buds

What “Bud Break” Means

Bud break is the stage when leaf buds open and new leaves begin to emerge from the bud scales. This varies by:

  • Tree species: Maples and willows break bud early (late March-early April); oaks break bud later (late April-early May)
  • Weather: Warm springs advance bud break; cold springs delay it
  • Location: South-facing, sheltered trees break bud earlier than north-facing, exposed trees
  • Individual tree variation: Even same species on same property may break bud at slightly different times

How We Determine Timing

We monitor tree development across our service area and schedule applications based on observed bud stages of target tree species. Timing is adjusted each year based on actual spring weather patterns, not calendar dates.

Why Three Applications?

Single applications are insufficient because:

  • Leaf emergence spans 3-4 weeks: Not all buds open simultaneously; multiple applications ensure all new growth is protected
  • Fungicide wears off: Rain, dew, and new leaf growth dilute protective coating; re-application maintains coverage
  • Spore release is continuous: Fungal spores are released throughout spring during favorable conditions; continuous protection needed
  • Weather unpredictability: If spring is especially wet and cool, disease pressure is higher and extended protection is critical

Three applications = Complete protection through entire vulnerable period.

Application Method & Equipment

Foliar Spray Application

We apply fungicide as a fine mist sprayed over the entire tree canopy:

  • Complete coverage: All leaves, needles, and twigs must be thoroughly coated with fungicide
  • High-reach spraying: Professional equipment capable of reaching 30-60 feet into tree canopy
  • Fine droplet size: Creates maximum leaf surface coverage with efficient product use
  • Systemic + contact action: Some fungicides are absorbed into leaf tissue (systemic); others remain on surface (contact); we use appropriate formulations for target diseases

Equipment Requirements

  • High-pressure sprayers: Truck-mounted or tow-behind spray units with sufficient pressure to reach tree tops
  • Specialized nozzles: Produce uniform mist for complete canopy penetration
  • Professional calibration: Ensures proper dosage and coverage

⚠️ Weather Requirements for Application

We WILL NOT spray if wind gusts exceed 10 MPH. Here’s why:

  • Drift prevention: Wind causes fungicide to drift away from target tree, reducing effectiveness and potentially affecting non-target plants
  • Coverage quality: Wind disrupts spray pattern, creating uneven coverage with gaps in protection
  • Safety: Drift can expose people, pets, and sensitive plants to unintended chemical contact
  • Product waste: Fungicide blown away from tree is wasted product and money

If conditions are too windy on scheduled day, we will reschedule for next available calm day. Proper application in correct conditions is more important than rigid scheduling.

What We DO NOT Do (Service Exclusions)

Important: Communicate these limitations clearly

  • We will NOT spray in high winds: Wind gusts over 10 MPH result in automatic reschedule for safety and effectiveness
  • We do NOT offer this as a one-time application:
    • Tree fungal disease prevention requires 3 applications to be effective
    • One application provides incomplete protection (leaves gaps in timing)
    • We won’t sell a service we know won’t work properly
  • We generally do NOT treat after leaves are fully expanded:
    • Fungicide is preventative, not curative
    • Once leaves show disease symptoms, treatment cannot reverse that damage
    • Late-season applications rarely provide benefit worth the cost
    • If you notice disease after spring, plan to start preventative program next spring
  • We do NOT treat trees that are beyond saving:
    • If tree has lost 50%+ of canopy from repeated disease, treatment may not save it
    • We’ll honestly assess whether treatment is likely to be beneficial or if removal is better option
    • Won’t take money for treatment unlikely to save tree

Pricing Structure

Custom Pricing Required

Tree fungicide pricing is customized based on several factors:

Factors Affecting Price

Factor

Impact on Price

Why

Tree Size (Height & Spread)

Larger trees = Higher cost

More spray volume needed; requires high-reach equipment; more time per tree

Number of Trees

More trees = Higher total but lower per-tree average

Efficiency of treating multiple trees on one property

Tree Species

Some species require more product

Dense canopy trees (spruce, oak) require more coverage than open canopy trees (birch, locust)

Disease Type/Severity

Generally same pricing

Preventative program is consistent; severity affects whether treatment is recommended, not price

Property Access

Difficult access may add cost

Fenced trees, proximity to structures, power lines affect application difficulty

Multi-Tree Discounts

Volume pricing available: Treating multiple trees on same property is more efficient, allowing us to offer lower per-tree pricing for 3+ trees.

Tax Status

Sales tax does NOT apply to this service in Nebraska (agricultural/horticultural exemption).

Estimate Process

  1. On-site assessment: We visit property to identify trees, measure approximate size, assess disease risk
  2. Species identification: Confirm tree species and susceptibility to specific diseases
  3. Current condition evaluation: Determine if tree is good candidate for treatment or if disease is too advanced
  4. Custom quote: Provide pricing for 3-application spring program

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: How do I know if my trees have fungus or disease?

A: It depends on the specific disease. Here are common symptoms to look for:

General Warning Signs

  • Spots on leaves or needles: Brown, yellow, orange, or black spots; may have distinct borders or halos
  • Premature leaf/needle drop: Leaves or needles turning brown and falling off in spring or summer (not normal fall drop)
  • Discoloration patterns: Yellowing, browning, or unusual coloring that starts on lower/inner branches and progresses outward
  • Deformed leaves: Curled, puckered, or distorted leaf development
  • Thinning canopy: Tree becoming progressively sparser, especially lower branches
  • Unusual growths: Galls, horn-like structures, or fungal fruiting bodies on bark or leaves

Disease-Specific Symptoms

Disease

Key Identifying Features

When Visible

Cedar-Apple Rust

Orange gelatinous “horns” on cedar after rain; yellow-orange spots on apple/crabapple leaves

Spring (cedar) / Summer (apple)

Needle Cast

Inner needles turn yellow, then brown, then drop; tiny black dots on needles; progressive thinning

Year-round (progressive)

Apple Scab

Dark olive-green to black spots on leaves and fruit; corky lesions on fruit

Late spring / Summer

Anthracnose

Brown irregular spots along leaf veins; distorted leaves; twig dieback

Spring / Early summer

If you’re unsure: Contact us for free assessment. We’ll identify the problem and recommend appropriate treatment (or advise if treatment isn’t needed/won’t help).

Q: If I notice disease after spring bud break, can I still get this service?

A: Unfortunately, probably not this year. Here’s why:

  • Fungicide is preventative, not curative: It must be applied BEFORE leaves are infected to work
  • Damage is permanent on current leaves: Spots, discoloration, and deformities on already-infected leaves cannot be reversed
  • Late application = wasted money: Applying after disease is visible provides little to no benefit
  • Better approach: Plan to start preventative program NEXT spring before bud break

Exception: If it’s very early in spring (bud break just starting, only a few leaves showing symptoms), there MAY be value in treating remaining unopened buds. Contact us for assessment—we’ll honestly tell you if treatment is likely to help or if you should wait until next year.

Q: Will one application be enough, or do I really need all three?

A: You really need all three applications for effective protection. Here’s why:

  • Leaf emergence spans 3-4 weeks: Not all buds open at once; single application misses later-emerging leaves
  • Fungicide washes off and wears down: Rain and new leaf growth require re-application to maintain protection
  • Spore release is continuous: Fungal spores are produced and released throughout spring; single application doesn’t cover entire period
  • Gaps in protection = infection: Even a few days without coverage allows disease to infect vulnerable new growth

We don’t offer single applications because we’ve seen they don’t work. The 3-application program is the minimum for reliable protection.

Q: Can this cure my tree’s disease if it’s already infected?

A: No, fungicide is preventative only. However, here’s what it CAN do:

What Fungicide CANNOT Do

  • Cannot reverse damage on already-infected leaves (spots stay, discoloration remains)
  • Cannot restore dropped leaves or needles
  • Cannot repair distorted or deformed leaves
  • Cannot bring back dead branches

What Fungicide CAN Do (If Tree Has Been Infected in Previous Years)

  • Prevent THIS year’s new growth from infection: This spring’s new leaves will be protected
  • Stop disease progression: Tree won’t get WORSE; damage is contained to previous years
  • Allow tree recovery: With healthy new foliage, tree can rebuild strength and vigor
  • Break disease cycle: Protects tree long enough for environmental fungal spore load to decrease

Key Understanding: The tree will look bad THIS spring (last year’s damaged leaves still present), but will look BETTER as season progresses and new, healthy leaves emerge and mature. Full aesthetic recovery takes 1-2 years of consistent treatment as damaged old growth is replaced by healthy new growth.

Q: How long does each application take?

A: Depends on tree size and number:

  • Single medium tree (20-30′ tall): 15-30 minutes including setup
  • Large tree (40-60′ tall): 30-60 minutes
  • Multiple trees: Additional time per tree, but efficiency improves with more trees (setup once)

You do not need to be home during application. We’ll notify you day before and leave confirmation after completion.

Q: Is the fungicide safe for people, pets, and beneficial insects?

A: Yes, when used properly:

  • During application: Keep people and pets inside or away from treatment area until spray settles and dries (typically 1-2 hours)
  • After drying: Safe for normal activity around trees; product bonds to leaf surfaces
  • Beneficial insects: Fungicides target fungal diseases, not insects; minimal impact on bees, butterflies, etc. (unlike insecticides)
  • Environmental safety: Professional products are formulated for minimal environmental impact when applied correctly

Q: Do I need this every year?

A: Depends on the disease and tree species:

Diseases Requiring Annual Treatment

  • Needle cast (spruce/pine): Yes, typically needs annual treatment for 3-5 years minimum, sometimes ongoing
  • Apple scab (susceptible varieties): Yes, usually annual treatment for aesthetically important trees
  • Cedar-apple rust (on crabapple): Yes if nearby cedar/juniper present; disease returns each year

Diseases That May Not Need Annual Treatment

  • Anthracnose: Often weather-dependent (bad in cool wet springs); may skip years with favorable weather
  • Various leaf spots: Severity varies by year; may treat only in high-risk years

Recommendation: Assess tree condition each spring. If disease was severe last year or weather favors disease, treat. If disease was mild and weather is dry, you may be able to skip a year. We’ll help you make informed decision based on your specific situation.

Q: What if it rains after application?

A: Timing matters:

  • Rain within 2 hours of application: May reduce effectiveness as fungicide hasn’t fully adhered to leaves; we may recommend re-treatment
  • Rain 2-4 hours after: Some reduction in effectiveness possible but usually acceptable
  • Rain 4+ hours after: Full effectiveness achieved; fungicide bonded to leaf surfaces
  • Light rain generally acceptable: Heavy downpours more problematic than light drizzle

We monitor weather: Won’t apply if heavy rain is forecast within 3-4 hours. If unexpected rain occurs, we’ll assess and re-treat if necessary at no additional cost.

Q: My tree has been losing needles/leaves for several years. Is it too late to save it?

A: Depends on how much is left and tree species. General guidelines:

Good Candidates for Treatment (Likely Success)

  • Tree retains 50%+ of normal foliage density
  • Branches still have live buds/growing points
  • No significant dead branches (beyond disease-related needle/leaf loss)
  • Tree is otherwise healthy (no other major problems like borers, root issues)

Poor Candidates (Treatment May Not Save Tree)

  • Tree has lost 70%+ of foliage over multiple years
  • Large sections of tree completely bare with no signs of new growth
  • Significant branch dieback beyond just needle/leaf loss
  • Multiple problems (disease + drought stress + pest damage)

We’ll be honest: During assessment, we’ll tell you if we think treatment is likely to save the tree or if removal is the better option. We won’t take your money for a treatment unlikely to succeed.

Q: Can you treat fruit trees (apple, pear, etc.) that I actually harvest fruit from?

A: Yes, but with important considerations:

  • Product selection matters: We use fungicides labeled for fruit trees with appropriate pre-harvest intervals
  • Ornamental vs. edible: If tree is purely ornamental (crabapple for flowers, not eating fruit), any fungicide is fine. If you eat fruit, we use appropriate products.
  • Disclosure required: You must tell us if you harvest and consume fruit so we use correct products
  • Harvest timing: Most fungicides have waiting periods (14-60 days) between last application and safe fruit harvest; this is usually fine since spring applications are finished before fruit matures

Q: What’s the difference between your service and products from the hardware store?

A: Several key differences:

Factor

DIY Products

Yard Boss Professional

Product Grade

Consumer formulations (weaker concentrations)

Professional-grade (higher efficacy)

Application Equipment

Hand pump sprayer (reaches 10-15 feet max)

High-pressure sprayers (reach 30-60 feet)

Coverage

Incomplete (can’t reach tree tops)

Complete canopy coverage

Timing Expertise

Guess when to apply

Monitor bud development, apply at optimal times

Disease Identification

Homeowner (limited knowledge)

Trained technicians (accurate diagnosis)

Results

Variable (often incomplete protection)

Reliable disease prevention

Q: I removed the cedar trees from my property. Do I still need to treat my crabapple for cedar-apple rust?

A: Possibly yes, unfortunately. Here’s why:

  • Spores travel far: Cedar-apple rust spores can travel 2-3 MILES on the wind
  • Neighbor’s cedars: Even if you removed yours, nearby properties with cedar/juniper can still be spore sources
  • Wild cedars: Native red cedar is common in Nebraska; spores from natural areas can reach your property
  • Assessment: If you’ve been getting rust every year, removing your cedars may reduce severity but likely won’t eliminate it entirely

Monitor your crabapple for a year after cedar removal. If rust still appears, you’ll need continued treatment.

Cross-Sell Opportunities

Recommended Complementary Services

Deep Root Tree Fertilization ⭐ HIGHLY RECOMMENDED PAIRING

Why these services work together perfectly:

  • Disease weakens trees: Infected trees lose leaves/needles, reducing photosynthesis and energy production
  • Fertilizer accelerates recovery: Well-nourished trees recover from disease stress faster and produce more vigorous new growth
  • Stronger trees resist disease better: Healthy, well-fed trees have better natural disease resistance
  • Complete tree care: Fungicide prevents disease + fertilizer promotes health = comprehensive tree wellness program

Sales message: “For trees fighting disease, combining fungicide treatment with deep root fertilization gives them the best chance to recover fully and stay healthy long-term.”

Tree and Landscape Insect Control (Japanese Beetle, Bagworm)

Connection to fungicide service:

  • Trees dealing with disease AND insect pressure face compounded stress
  • Comprehensive protection (disease + insects) ensures tree health
  • Some customers need both services for different trees or problems

Preventative Tree Health Programs

Long-term tree protection:

  • Annual fungicide for disease-prone species
  • Regular fertilization for vigor
  • Creates predictable annual tree care routine

Common Objections & Responses

Objection: “Can’t I just spray once when I see the disease?”

Response: Unfortunately no—fungicide is preventative, not curative. It’s like trying to put a raincoat on after you’re already soaked. The fungicide must be on the leaves BEFORE spores land and infect to work. Once you see disease symptoms (spots, discoloration), those leaves are already infected and the damage is permanent on those leaves. Plus, fungal diseases require THREE applications timed to bud development stages to protect all new growth. By the time you see symptoms, we’ve missed the treatment window for this year. The good news: we can start a preventative program NEXT spring to protect future growth and stop the disease cycle.

Objection: “That seems expensive for spraying trees.”

Response: Let’s look at the value: A mature landscape tree adds $1,000-7,000+ to property value depending on species and size. If that tree dies from untreated disease, you face removal costs ($500-2,000) plus replacement costs ($300-2,000 for new tree) plus 15-30 years for replacement to reach same size. Our 3-application preventative program costs $[estimate] and protects your tree investment for the season. For trees susceptible to annual disease (like needle cast on spruce or apple scab on crabapple), think of it as tree insurance—a small annual investment protects a much larger asset. Plus, diseased trees look terrible and reduce your home’s curb appeal. Treatment maintains the beauty and value your trees provide.

Objection: “Can’t I just use the spray from the hardware store?”

Response: For small trees (under 15 feet), maybe—but it’s unlikely to work well. Here’s why: DIY hand pump sprayers only reach 10-15 feet maximum. Most landscape trees are 20-60 feet tall. If you can’t spray the entire canopy—especially the upper branches—you get incomplete protection. Fungal spores land on untreated leaves, infection starts there, and spreads. Plus, consumer products are weaker formulations than professional grades, and most homeowners apply at wrong times (usually after disease appears when it’s too late). Our professional equipment reaches entire canopy, our products are commercial-grade, and we time applications precisely to bud stages. For small ornamental trees or shrubs, DIY might be adequate. For valuable landscape trees, professional treatment provides reliable results DIY can’t match.

Objection: “My tree has looked bad for years—why treat it now?”

Response: Great question. Here’s the reality: Every year of untreated disease weakens the tree further. It’s not just about aesthetics—repeated defoliation from disease reduces the tree’s ability to photosynthesize and produce energy. Over time, this stress makes trees vulnerable to other problems (insects, drought, winter damage) and can eventually kill them. If we START treatment now, we stop further damage. This year’s new growth will be healthy and protected. The tree won’t magically look perfect overnight—old damaged leaves/needles will still drop off—but NEW growth will be healthy. Over 1-2 years of treatment, as damaged old growth is replaced by healthy new growth, the tree recovers its beauty and vigor. The question is: Do you want to stop the decline now while the tree is still savable, or wait another few years until it’s beyond help and you’re paying $1,500+ for removal? Treatment now = saving the tree. Waiting = losing the tree.

Objection: “Why do I need three applications? Can’t you just do two?”

Response: We’ve found through years of experience that two applications leave gaps in protection. Here’s why three is necessary: Leaf/needle emergence spans 3-4 weeks. Buds don’t all open simultaneously—early buds might open in late March while some late buds don’t open until late April. Three applications (before bud break, at bud break, after bud break) ensure ALL new growth is protected as it emerges. Plus, fungicide residue wears off from rain and new leaf growth—applications 2 weeks apart maintain protective coverage without gaps. We’ve tried two-application programs in the past and consistently saw breakthrough infections on late-emerging growth. Three applications is the minimum for reliable season-long protection. We don’t offer two-application programs because we’ve seen they don’t consistently work.

Key Talking Points for AI Responses

When discussing tree fungicide service, emphasize:

  • Preventative, not curative: “Must be applied BEFORE infection—cannot cure existing damage”
  • Timing critical: “Treatment window is spring bud break—miss it and wait until next year”
  • Three applications required: “Complete protection through entire leaf emergence period”
  • Raincoat analogy: “Put it on BEFORE going out in the rain—putting it on after you’re soaked doesn’t help”
  • Permanent evergreen damage: “Conifers don’t regrow lost needles—bare branches stay bare forever”
  • Tree value protection: “Mature landscape tree worth $1,000-7,000+; treatment protects investment”
  • Recovery takes time: “Tree looks better as new healthy growth replaces old damaged leaves (1-2 years)”
  • Professional equipment required: “Need high-pressure sprayers to reach 30-60 feet—DIY can’t achieve this”
  • Weather-dependent: “Won’t spray over 10 MPH winds—proper application more important than rigid schedule”

Pairs with fertilization: “Disease protection + nutrition = complete tree health program”