A Gardeners Forum
Posted By: sarahm apple trees - March 10th, 2004 at 01:40 AM
I have 2 apple trees that were purchased and planted about 4-5 years ago. I don't remember what the names of the apples are, but when I bought them at a reputable nursery, I was assured that they would pollinate one another. The first 2 years the harvest was sparse, the next two years the squirrels got the apples before I could, and LAST year I had an abundance of blossoms and lots of tiny apples. But most of them fell off the tree before they matured. From dozens of blossoms on both trees the number of mature apples numbered 11 on one tree and 9 on the other. What can I do to get a good harvest this year?
Posted By: Tom Wolf Re: apple trees - March 10th, 2004 at 05:45 AM
sound's like you need to prune your trees so that you can get air flow, that will let them pollinate and produce fruit insted of folage. also try putting alum. pie pans in your trees too spook off those pesty squirrels[tree rats]
Posted By: Rick Re: apple trees - March 10th, 2004 at 08:54 AM
There's an excellent little book called :the Backyard Orchardist" by Stella Otto. She did a good job with the subject of pruning. It covers most fruits. It's available at the Seed Savers Exchange .
Rick
Posted By: weezie13 Re: apple trees - March 10th, 2004 at 04:14 PM
Isn't there something about if you say for example have 20 blossoms on a branch and you really want to have 3 or 5 or 7 big apples, then you are supposed to pull or snip off those extra flower/buds and let the tree concentrate on just growing a selected number of fruits.


HI wavey Sarahm by the way!!
Welcome aboard!!
Do you have anymore fruiting items or plants??
Just curious!
Weezie
Posted By: obywan59 Re: apple trees - April 13th, 2004 at 07:05 AM
With so much fruit set, you need to thin the fruits. Apples prefer roughly a 5 inch spacing with only 1 fruit per cluster, so pull the rest off ASAP. Each fruit needs the work of about 40 leaves for nourishment. It may seem like you are wasting a lot of fruits, but a full crop consists of only a 5% fruit set.
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