Thanks Bill and also Bill S, sounds like I can safely remove flowers to 
promote wood growth.  I.E. what I'm reading in to this is, there is no magic 
that pollination and fruit set performs that is beneficial to young trees' 
future health/fruit production.

 


 
Thanks,
Rye Hefley
Future Farmers Marketer
So. Cal.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Fleming, William <[email protected]>
To: Apple-crop discussion list <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Mar 14, 2011 7:14 am
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Manually dropping fruit from young trees


A lime-sulfur/fish oil spray just after full bloom is a common organic 

alternative to hand thinning that works well. It works well enough that many 

conventional growers use it also. I suppose if a person wanted to burn all 

flowers off a tree they would need two of these caustic sprays just before and 

after full bloom.

There used to be an excellent conventional flower thinner that lost 
registration 

many years ago, think it was called Eligtal. I haven't kept up with any 

replacements for it.



Bill Fleming



Montana State University



Western Ag Research Center



580 Quast Ln



Corvallis, Montana





-----Original Message-----

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 

On Behalf Of Bill Shoemaker

Sent: Saturday, March 12, 2011 6:31 AM

To: Apple-crop discussion list

Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Manually dropping fruit from young trees



Rye



Its common for many commercial growers to do just that. Rather than hand 

thinning though, they use chemical thinners, such as NAA and Sevin. Depending 
on 

weather conditions, rates and bloom load, it will take out a percentage of the 

flowers.



Bill



---- Original message ----

>Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2011 20:29:54 -0500 (EST)

>From: Rye <[email protected]>  

>Subject: [apple-crop] Manually dropping fruit from young trees  

>To: [email protected]

>

>   Why is it customary to allow fruit to form and then

>   drop it when it is small, rather than removing

>   flowers so the tree doesn't "waste" energy forming

>   any fruit at all?  Curious if tree growth can be

>   increased without harmful effects by removing

>   flowers before they form fruit.

>

>   Thanks,

>   Rye Hefley

>   Future Farmers Marketer

>   So. Cal.

>________________

>_______________________________________________

>apple-crop mailing list

>[email protected]

>http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop

William H Shoemaker, UI-Crop Sciences

Sr Research Specialist, Food Crops

St Charles Horticulture Research Center

535 Randall Road  St Charles, IL  60174

630-584-7254; FAX-584-4610

_______________________________________________

apple-crop mailing list

[email protected]

http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop



_______________________________________________

apple-crop mailing list

[email protected]

http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop




 
_______________________________________________
apple-crop mailing list
[email protected]
http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop

Reply via email to