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5 answers

That depends on the species of trees. All trees have a guard bud for the leaves(some even have three budding possibilities). On the flower buds some have several but others have just one.
It appears in nature that if a tree buds out and gets hit really hard and makes no fruit-- that it allows that tree to have a break in production and rejuvinate its strength; thus keeping the tree in better shape throughout it's life span.

2007-01-07 11:21:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, they do. The blooms right now will not bear fruit if any frosts or cold snaps come your way, but the spring blooms will have no problem at all. It'll just be like any other year with normal bloom times.

2007-01-07 18:28:09 · answer #2 · answered by mmonkeyccup 2 · 0 2

My guess is they wont bloom from a bud that already bloomed this time of year and died off. Buds that did NOT bloom during this time may do OK in the Spring.

2007-01-07 18:29:25 · answer #3 · answered by leothecomm 2 · 1 1

Yes there is bound to be a cold snap and the tree will return to dormancy reemerging in the spring

2007-01-07 19:26:56 · answer #4 · answered by fortyninertu 5 · 0 0

yes

2007-01-07 18:23:04 · answer #5 · answered by sexy prawn 3 · 0 2

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