Posts

Returning after the second surgery

 Greetings all! My second procedure seems to be a success and I'm getting back out to the trees more regularly. Some observations: Pots versus bags for growing out? This year I was curious which would end up better. So I ended up with mostly 3 gallon pots and bags. After watching them grow; it appears the pots have taller and healthy trees.  I find the PVC bags a bit annoying with leaning over and making the soil uneven or making leaning trees. And sometimes the folded over edges collapse under watering. It is also time to try some chip budding.

Just getting back after surgery

 Been taking it easy after some leg surgery. Everything appears to have gone well with that. Apart from getting out and killing some aphids on various plants; I've been limited to inside. But I did make a new list on Apples that Root by cutting/ have Burr knots. Here is the latest and greatest compilation list with some surprising entries as of July 11th 2024. I would welcome your input as to trying some of these to confirm the mostly British reporting. Lots of Burr Knotts: Benoni Ben’s Red Burr Knott Charlotte Daunt Cornish Aromatic Heusgen’s Golden Reinette Lord Burghley Rivers Nonsuch The Nelson Tom Putt Winter Banana At least some Burr Knots: Appletown Wonder Arthur W. Barnes Baldwin Ballyvaughan Seedling Beachemwell {Patton & Tathum} Belle De Pointise Beverly Blenium Orange Blue Pearmain Brabany Bellfleur Byford Wonder Cissy Colonel Vaughn Cottenham Seedling Cox Orange Pippin Cox Pomona Devonshire Quarreden Disharoon Duke of Devonshire Edith Hopwood Egremont Russet Emneth

A pleasant surprise in the misting rain!

 Going out to check this years grafts; and I was shocked our blog namesake apple has come back from the dead. A Blairmont on M111 set two buds into leafing out so very late in the year! This is why I leave perhaps dead looking grafts with a touch of green out and cared for. Hopefully it will fight on. Perhaps giving me further wood to graft this fall.

Great article on inbreeding in apples!

  A worthwhile read: https://nmfruitgrowers.wordpress.com/2014/03/11/inbreeding-in-modern-apple-cultivation-by-hans-joachim-bannier/

The lovely heat.

 Good ole triple digit heat on the thermometer. 101F. Have to water all the critters well early. Made a count on the pad. 47 live trees and 3 iffy. Over on the work bench there are another 6-7. Still going to chip bud some Anna and Dorsett Gold yet.

The last Blairmont graft dies out.

 Really perturbed with fireblight this year. I am down to 42 live grafts on the grow pad. Hope those grafts yet to bud take soon. Probably another 35 are there. I have some surviving scions I pulled of root stocks. I will attempt to chip bud as many as possibly on saved root stock from dead grafts. The G.214 line is the sorriest of the line up. With a Mother Plant and 4 surviving grafts. I'm really disappointed in Geneva root stock. P.2 was doing far better. But the last really hit P.2 hard. Lost 6 beautiful Shockley grafts. All told 18 P.2 grafts survive. Plus the mother. And my ironic favorite; P.1 on P.2! As soon as it gets more height it is going deep planted as a nurse root so I get a true P.1 tree{much like M.7Elma} The rest of course are good ole M111. 20 of them. Will definitely have to re-order some scions. Terry Winter, Tarbutton, Hoover, Mrs.Bryan after such a great start. Cauley. Norfolk Beefing, Hudson Golden Gem. Devine, St.Clair.  So far a few seem pretty robust and

The cull from Fireblight

 So far 14 grafts have been lost to fireblight. 8 on G.214. 4 on P.2 and 2 on M111. By no means is that final.I still have to go through the stooling pots and plants on the pad. And also does not count any of the late grafts which are to early to tell. On the bright side; quite a few are making the transition to young saplings now.