We planted Northern Spy on bud-9 in 2002 at 5'X15'.  Could have been 5'X14'.  
Very little pruning other than to keep the tree in balance, Axe system, some 
crop 2006 and full crop by 2008.  No treatments.
Raining here today but I was up to my knees in snow yesterday pruning. 

Art Kelly
Kelly Orchards
Acton, ME
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jourdain Jean-Marc 
  To: Apple-Crop 
  Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 4:46 AM
  Subject: RE: Apple-Crop: Early bearing


  Hello

  In our area we are used with making fruit from vigour, we try not to use 
chemicals or girdling, or root cuts, to lower the global shoot growth. This we 
think would drive the orchard to less potential.

  In most of the situation, no pruning (at least till fruit set comes), rope 
bending, low nitrogen supply can achieve the job. This is investment since it 
takes only 2 or 3 years of intensive care. 

  What we call equilibrium is reached when the tree crops on a regular base, 
and makes the necessary and sufficient wood and buds for the next year. 

  Depending on soil climate conditions, rootstock, variety habit, the 
equilibrium is reached for a tree volume that can be very variable (2 meters to 
6 meters tall trees). Tree and row spacing at plantings must anticipate this 
tree volume, not so easy to tune. 

   

   

  Jean Marc Jourdain

  www dot Ctifl dot fr

  France south west

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  De : [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] De 
la part de Harold Schooley
  Envoyé : mardi 10 mars 2009 20:32
  À : Apple-crop
  Objet : Apple-Crop: Early bearing

   

  Would someone care to divulge a recipe for getting slow-to-bear varieties 
into production sooner.  I have Northern Spy in mind using Ethrel or NAA or 
combinations.  Apogee perhaps.  Other techniques?

   

  Harold Schooley

  Schooley Orchards Limited

  Simcoe, Ontario

  Canada

   

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