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Have you ever noticed that your backyard apple or pear tree produces a large quantity of fruit one year, but a ...
To keep fruit trees healthy and ensure they bear plenty of fruit, they need sufficient nutrients. Learn when fertilization is ...
Tree vigor. This problem will cause trees to expend energy in growing wood versus producing flower buds. Improper tree vigor ...
Apricot trees tend to flower in early spring and need to be protected from late frosts to prevent flower buds falling off.
Stone fruit production is damaged by colder weather that happens after the buds of the trees have already begun growing. So, you need to think “critically.” More specifically, what are your ...
As a result, new lateral buds will develop ... above the fruit spurs that are farther down the branch. Peach trees bear fruit almost entirely on one-year-old branch growth (last year’s growth).
Researchers at UBC Okanagan are working to learn more about how sweet cherry trees naturally protect their buds from freezing during cold winter months. This is critical for fruit trees because ...
just before buds form in late winter or early spring. Unless your tree blooms on old growth, this is your safest bet for proper timing. Dormant pruning invigorates the tree and promotes new growth ...
Except for occasional late freezes after bud break some years, our climate is suited to these fruits. Some may also grow stone fruits (fruits with a single, hard pit) like peach, apricot, plum, or ...
Her latest paper, published in Plant Biology, examines how sweet cherries, like many fruit trees, use a natural survival strategy called supercooling to protect undeveloped flower buds during ...
Free-standing fruit trees or bush trees, such as those grown in an orchard should be pruned when they're dormant, in winter. Trained trees, such as espaliers, cordons, pyramids and fans should be ...