keegs
Veteran Member
I pruned all the fruit trees last fall and I wouldn't swear by it but they all seem to have allot more flowers this spring. Is there a correlation? Do more flowers mean more fruit?
I haven't heard that one before. I do know that when the blueberries come in, our cat will be in the orchard trying to catch unsuspecting birds.I'm told you want to prune an apple tree so you could throw a cat through it. Lots of light to the interior is good for fruit set and development.
Chuck
Hey Dave, I hear Gravensteins do well in the northern climes. They may be hard to come by but I'm going to scout around before my next trip up to the farm. I'd like to get some in the ground now so I'll have something to retire on. :thumbsup:
The only fruit trees I have are apples gone wild and volunteer apple that started from dropped apples. They are a mess, branches reaching through the trees 15'-20' on some. I have been slowly releasing them and trying to prune them into something. The sap suckers have drilled the older ones pretty good and many have this black fungus on them that looks like soot. I think that is clearing up some as they get some air and light on them. They are basket cases.
The deer and moose appreciate my efforts. We don't eat enough apples to get serious about them with sprays and all.
Dave.