Like its end-of-the-season counterpart, Pristine is also a product of the Purdue-Rutgers-Illinois (PRI) cooperative apple breeding program. It was released for commercial planting in the mid '90s and luckily for me has shown resistance or immunity to Apple Scab, Fireblight, Powdery Mildew and Cedar Apple Rust.
The other added benefit of this variety is that it has amazing storage properties for an early apple. Even after days without refrigeration the apples still retained a great texture that varied...... [ Read the rest of this story ]
| Fruit set, the miracle of pollination |
S...... [ Read the rest of this story ]
| Early Spring in the orchard |
"Never have so few apples needed so little
thinning."
Now ol' Winston may never had said anything at all like that but it's a bit of paraphasing that sure reflects reality on the ground in an orchard that saw temps of 24F at full bloom on May 9. The extension charts are right: 90% bud kill is spot on when temps get that cold. Which leaves me protecting a somewhat limited crop, admittedly slightly better in the later blooming varieties. I watched bumblebees joyfully have a go at these blossoms after the freeze and figured maybe they know something I don't. I watched more apple sawflies than ever oviposit on the undersides of blossom clusters and figured maybe they know something I don't. We were all wrong. . . and 2010 will be nowhere near a bumper crop year. I sprayed Surround on all the trees that bloomed thinking maybe I'll be lucky. Now these "ghost trees" stand as sentinels to my frustrated hopes. What fruit I do have looks fantastic, but sometimes I wonder how long I always will be needing to look forward to the next year!
pesticide application drift towards IPM. I think this site is a real blessing in trying to move things along in a healthy direction. I do
remain unconvinced that things have come around much despite Michael's Herculean efforts. I can still find on ocassion in the wild (and sometimes in mall parking lots) examples of untended trees bearing reasonably sound fruit. I don't have an explanation of this
and it confounds the hell out of me. In these moments I am reminded of a statement by Sir Albert Howard who was able to optimize plant and animal heath using (primarily) the Indore method of composting. He said something to the effect that "without the help of agronomists, entomologists ...and a list of other scientists... We were able to raise healthy plants and livestock."
At the MOFGA Fairgrounds, I am witness to the sometimes frenetic ativity of CJ Walke, who takes care of the two small...... [ Read the rest of this story ]
We moved into our home in 1992. The garden has about two dozen very old pome fruit trees. Apples, pears and quinces, some planted over 100 years ago. The pear trees are huge – about 12 metres high with trunk diameters of about 1 metre. The trees were riddled with Codling Moth, with over 90% of fruit having grubs inside.
In the second year we decided to start using pheromone ties. The Codling Moth damage dropped to around 25%, and after two seasons the level of damage stabilized around 10%, so we were quite pleased. Pheromone ties must be placed near the tops of the trees for best effect, but doing this in the pears was out of the question, so we just lived with a bit of damage.
...... [ Read the rest of this story ]
