Growing Tree Fruits: Kentucky Master Gardener Manual Chapter 16
Growing Tree Fruits: Kentucky Master Gardener Manual Chapter 16
HO-104
By Jeff Olsen, extension agent, Willamette Valley, and Anita Nina Azarenko, extension horticulture specialist; both at Oregon State
University. Adapted for Kentucky by John Strang, extension horticulture specialist, University of Kentucky.
In this chapter:
Planning.................................................................243
Pruning Terminology .......................................246
Planting and Fertilizing....................................248
Irrigating................................................................249
Fruit Thinning......................................................249
Harvest and Handling.......................................250
Insect and Disease Management.................252
Pruning ..................................................................254
For More Information........................................255
Planning
Variety Selection
When planning your orchard, choose varieties that not only
are family favorites but are easy to care for. Remember that dwarf
trees are always the best choice for home orchards.
Generally, the more varieties of fruit you grow, the more complex
it is to manage them. However, if you enjoy a lot of different fruits
and the management challenge, by all means plant a wide range.
Nearly all fruit and nut tree varieties (including some hazelnuts)
are grafted to a genetically different root system, called a rootstock.
When you choose a variety based on flavor, harvest period, disease
resistance, color, etc., it is the grafted variety you are choosing, not
the rootstock.
The ultimate size of a tree depends on the vigor of both the
rootstock and the grafted variety. By knowing the vigor ratings of
both, you can determine how big a tree will grow. See Table 1 for
vigor ratings for some apple varieties. See the section on rootstocks
below to learn more about vigor of various rootstocks.
Not all recommended varieties are included in the lists in this
chapter. For apples alone, hundreds of varieties exist, and other
fruits could have many more varieties. Consult the resources listed
under For More Information to learn about additional varieties.
General types of apples include old style, cider, English, or flavor
varieties. If you want to have fresh-off-the-tree apples for a long
period of time in the summer and fall, choose varieties with staggered maturity dates (Table 2).
When buying trees for Kentucky, select disease-resistant varieties (Table 3) to reduce the impact of apple scab, cedar apple rust,
fireblight, and powdery mildew.
Agriculture and Natural Resources Family and Consumer Sciences 4-H Youth Development Community and Economic Development
EXTENSION
High vigor
Earligold
Lodi
Mutsu or Crispin
Moderate vigor
Akane
Arkansas Black
Cortland
CrimsonCrisp
Delicious (red)
Empire
Enterprise
Freedom
Fuji
Gala
Golden Delicious
GoldRush
Granny Smith
Idared
Jersey Mac
Jonagold
Jonathan
Liberty
Melrose
Mollies Delicious
Newtown
Pixie Crunch
Pristine
Redfree
Sansa
Rome Beauty
Stayman
Suncrisp
Sundance
Williams Pride
Low vigor
Spur Delicious
Spur Golden
Spur Granny Smith
Very low vigor
Spur Arkansas Black
Spur Delicious
Spur Rome
Super Spur
Rootstock Selection
When choosing a fruit tree, check to see
what rootstock it uses. Rootstocks are not
chosen for their fruit. Most originally were
selected for their ability to control overall
tree size. Some were selected for other
characteristics, such as the following:
Efficient yield production
Disease resistance
Tolerance of different soil conditions,
including poorly drained soils
Cold hardiness
Apples
The greatest choice in rootstocks exists
with apples. The most vigorous apple
rootstocks are seedlings, which are simply sprouted apple seeds. When an apple
variety is grafted onto a seedling rootstock,
the tree can easily grow more than 30 feet
tall. Most home orchardists cant efficiently
spray, thin, and harvest a tree this tall.
Researchers in England developed the
Malling series of apple rootstocks, which
offers the opportunity to select trees that
grow to specific heights. The height may
be anywhere from dwarf (4 to 12 feet) to
semidwarf (16 to 18 feet). Each rootstock in
this series is identified by the letter M (for
Malling) or MM (for Malling Merton) and
a number (Figure 1). Higher numbers dont
represent taller trees.
Percent
90
60 - 75
55 - 65
40 - 50
25 - 35
< 25
90%
90
80
60-75%
70
Percent
Table 1. Apple
variety vigor ratings.
Chapter 16
55-65%
60
40-50%
50
40
25-35%
30
20
10
0
M.9
Bud 9
M.26
G.11
M.7
G.30
M.106
M.111
Seedling
Chapter 16
Midseason
Williams Pride
Empire
Freedom
Gala
Ginger Gold
Late
Jonathan
Liberty
Arkansas Black
Cortland
CrimsonCrisp
Delicious (Golden
and Red)
Empire
Enterprise
Fuji
Gold Rush
Granny Smith
Idared
Jonagold
Melrose
Mutsu or Crispin
Newtown
Pixie Crunch
Rome Beauty
Stayman
Sun Crisp
Sundance
York
AS CR FB PM Comments
VR S
S R Good quality for season, not as tart
as Lodi, makes excellent applesauce
Williams
VR S MR R Good quality for season, corkspot
Pride
frequently observed, subacid, yellow
flesh
Redfree2
VR VR S
S Firm, summer apple, juicy
Dayton2
VR R MR R Similar to Prima
Liberty2
VR R3 R R Fruit similar to Macoun, crisp, juicy,
yellowish flesh, tart at harvest
Nova Easygro VR VR R S Fruit similar to Cortland, fair quality
(for trial)
Spartan2
MR R MR R Firm McIntosh type, needs thinning
to develop size
Jonafree2
VR S
S R Fruit similar to Jonathan, but less acid
Pixie Crunch2 VR
Macfree
VR VR3 MR
Priscilla2
VR VR3 VR
SirPrize2
VR
CrimsonCrisp VR MR
Enterprise2
VR VR3 MR
GoldRush2
VR
Sundance2
VR VR VR VR
MR
Stores
Until Skin Color
short Light yellow with red blush
storage
mid-July short 70-80% dark red
storage
Harvest
early July
late July
mid-Aug.
late Aug.
Oct
Sept
Dec
early
Dec 80% dark red on green-yellow
Sept.
early
Jan
Dark to pale red depending on
Sept.
weather
early
Dec 90% red stripes
Sept.
Small, sweet flavored, super crisp,
early
Dec Deep red
kids apple
Sept.
Similar to McIntosh, mealy under hot mid-Sept. Dec 75% medium red over green-yellow
conditions
Tart, firm, somewhat coarse textured, mid-Sept. Nov 70-90% dark red blush over
crisp, juicy, small fruit size
yellow-green
Fine grain, crisp, tender, bruises very mid-Sept. Dec Greenish yellow, slight red blush
easily, sterile pollen
Medium sized red fruit, firm, crisp,
mid-Sept. March 95% red
tart, stores very well
Sprightly, subacid, slightly aromatic
early
Feb
Washed, 90% light to medium red
and spicy, crisp, fine grained juicy
Oct.
flesh, stores well
Fruit very crisp, firm, tart at harvest
mid-Oct. April Deep yellow with red blush
and sweetens up after storage, very
susceptible to black rot. Will store for
11 months.
Excellent quality with fruity flavor like mid-Oct.
Mar Yellow, occasionally russets in stem
mild pineapple, fruit does not drop
cavity
Chapter 16
Pruning Terminology
Crotch angleThe angle formed between the
trunk and a limb. The strongest crotch angle
is 45 to 60.
LeaderThe uppermost portion of a scaffold
limb.
Scaffold limbA large limb that forms a trees
framework.
ShootThe length of branch growth in one
season. The bud scale scars (ring of small
ridges) on a branch mark the start of a seasons growth.
Cherries
Most cherry trees in Kentucky are grown
on Mazzard rootstocks. However, recent
research on growth-controlling rootstocks has
produced more choices. New dwarf varieties
are now being grown on Gisela rootstocks,
and new European rootstocks are being
tested each year. The most common Gisela
rootstocks are Gisela 5, Gisela 6, and Gisela
12. They produce trees that are 50, 7090, and
60 percent of Mazzard, respectively. Other
new rootstocks include MxM2 (100 percent), MxM60 (100 percent of Mazzard), and
MxM14 (7585 percent of Mazzard). They
bear earlier and have better disease resistance
than Mazzard seedlings.
Table 4. Cherry
varieties.
Table 5. Pear
varieties.
Table 6. Nectarine
varieties.
Table 7.
Peach varieties (westside).
Sweet
Black Gold
Hedelfingen
Lapins
Sweetheart
Tart
Danube
Montmorency
North Star
Surefire
European
Blakes Pride
Harrow Sweet
Honey Sweet
Kieffer
Magness
Potomac
Seckel
Asian
Chojuro
Korean Giant,
Olympic
Megietsu
Shinko
Yoinashi
Nectarines
Fantasia
Flavortop
Red Gold
Sunglo
Maturity
July
Gala
Harrow Diamond
Garnet Beauty
Redhaven
Sentry
Topaz
August
Allstar
Biscoe
Blushing Star (White)
Bounty
Contender
Coralstar
Cresthaven
Ernies Choice
Glowing Star
John Boy
Loring
Madison
Redskin
Summer Breeze
September
Encore
Flamin Fury PF-27A
Flameprince
Laurol
Ouachita Gold
Victoria
Chapter 16
Pears
Most European pears are grown on one
of many selections from the Old HomeFarmingdale cross. Asian pears sometimes
use these rootstocks but also are grown on
two species of Pyrus: Pyrus betulaefolia
and Pyrus calleryana. See Table 5 for pear
varieties.
Table 8.
Nut varieties.
Hazelnuts (filberts)*
Gamma
Jefferson
Santiam
Yamhill
Walnuts, Persian
Allegheny
Coble No. 2
Kaiser
Walnut, Black
Leon Pounds II
Neel No. 1
Rowher
Sauber No. 1
Surprise
Thomas-Myers
*Complete resistance
to eastern filbert blight
(EFB).
Note: Gamma, Santiam
and Jefferson are good
pollinators for the best
variety, Yamhill.
Pollination Methods
Trees can be grouped into two categories: those that bear fruit through selfpollination (called self-fruitful) and those
that must be pollinated by another variety
(called self-unfruitful).
Cherries
Lapins, Black Gold, and Sweetheart are
self-fruitful sweet cherry varieties, as are
tart (pie) cherries.
Some sweet cherries do not set fruit
unless they are pollinized by another
pollen-compatible variety. Hedelfingen is
pollinated by Lapins or Sweetheart.
Apples
Some apple varieties, such as Rome
Beauty, Newtown, and Transparent, are
self-fruitful, but most varieties of apples do
not set fruit unless they are pollinated by
another pollen-compatible variety. Most
apple varieties that dont set fruit when
Other fruits
Most varieties of pears do not set fruit
unless they are pollinated by another
pollen-compatible variety.
Most European plums are self-fruitful.
See Table 8 for nut varieties.
Chapter 16
Tree Spacing
Apple trees typically are spaced from
6 feet apart (high density) to more than
20 feet apart. Spacing between rows for
other fruit trees ranges from 12 to 24 feet
because they often lack growth-controlling
rootstocks.
True genetic dwarf trees can, of course,
be planted closer. Dwarf trees trained on
trellises have the closest spacing.
In planning your orchard, compare the
amount of space available to the number of
trees you want to grow. Spacing trees very
close together does push them into earlier
production, but tightly spaced trees require
more pruning at an earlier age in order to
keep them productive and so foliage does
not dry out as rapidly, which can lead to
more disease problems.
drip line
Chapter 16
Irrigating
The amount of water fruit trees need
depends on rainfall and soil type. The best
way to determine your trees needs is to
check the soil moisture in the root zone at
12 and 24 inches deep.
To test, remove some soil with a soil
probe or shovel and squeeze a handful of it
into a ball. If it crumbles when released, the
trees are dry and need water. If the ball of
soil stays together but does not feel wet, the
trees have adequate moisture. If the soil ball
drips water when squeezed, there is more
than enough moisture.
Remember that young trees have an
undeveloped root system and cannot
absorb much water at a time. In warm
weather, watering young trees regularly is
very helpful to get them off to a good start.
Drip irrigation is preferred by many
orchardists because it allows the foliage,
flowers, and fruit to remain dry, an important factor in disease prevention. If you
Fruit Thinning
Thinning of apples, peaches, and Asian
and European pears is an important part
of orchard management. It removes some
of the developing embryos that otherwise
would produce flowering inhibitors. It
improves the size and quality of fruit and
helps ensure an adequate crop the next year.
The effect of fruit thinning is greatest on
cultivars that tend to have a heavy fruit set.
Determine the size of fruit you want and
thin accordingly.
There are three ways to thin fruit. Picking
the tiny fruit or blossoms by hand is the
most commonly used method. Mechanical
thinning involves using a tool to knock fruit
off the tree. Plant-growth regulators are
sprayed onto apple and pear trees in commercial orchards during and after bloom to
thin the crop.
Timing
Early thinning of blossoms or fruit helps
stimulate flower initiation for the next years
crop, especially on cultivars that tend toward
biennial bearing (bearing fruit every other
year). Apples initiate flower buds for the
following years crop within 40 days of full
bloom, so thinning has a positive effect on the
next years bloom if done within this period.
Pears form buds a little later, so you can thin
them within 60 days of full bloom. Attaining
adequate return bloom on peaches is seldom a
problem, but early thinning generally helps.
Thinning also helps increase the size of
harvested fruit by stimulating cell division
in the remaining fruit. More cell division
means more cells per fruit and thus larger
fruit. The period of cell division for apples
lasts four to five weeks after petal fall. For
peaches, it lasts four weeks after petal fall,
and pears continue cell division for seven to
nine weeks after petal fall. All fruits continue some cell division in the epidermis
layer (the skin) much longer than in the
main part of the fruit flesh.
Chapter 16
How to Thin
Apples
Asian pears
Asian pears must also be thinned. Thin
early to get large fruit. Each blossom cluster
contains several flowers. Save the blossom/
fruit in the middle and remove the rest.
Research has shown that this middle fruit
is the roundest. By keeping that in mind
and by counting the flowers as they appear
starting from the base of the cluster, you
can determine which fruit to remove. For
example, if there are seven flowers, save
the fourth fruit from the base of the cluster.
Depending on the trees vigor, you might
experiment by leaving two fruits per spur
and checking the fruit size response.
Peaches
Thin peaches to about 6 to 8 inches
from one another. This spacing gives them
adequate room to mature to full size.
Chapter 16
Apple
1
Stage
2
Stage
3
Stage
4
Stage
5
Stage
6
Stage
7
Stage
8
Stage
9
Stage
Pear
Peach
Tart Cherry
Dormant
Dormant
Dormant
Dormant
Dormant
Silver tip
Swollen bud
Swollen bud
Bud burst
Swollen bud
10% kill
15 F
10% kill
15 F
10% kill
18 F
10% kill
17 F
10% kill
14 F
90% kill
2 F
90% kill
1 F
90% kill
2 F
90% kill
5 F
90% kill
1 F
Green tip
Bud burst
Half-inch green
Green tip
Bud burst
10% kill
18 F
10% kill
20 F
10% kill
23 F
10% kill
25 F
10% kill
18 F
90% kill
10 F
90% kill
7 F
90% kill
5 F
90% kill
14 F
90% kill
3 F
Half-inch green
Green cluster
Pink
Tight cluster
Green cluster
10% kill
23 F
10% kill
26 F
10% kill
25 F
10% kill
26 F
10% kill
26 F
90% kill
17 F Tart Cherry
90% kill
16 Plum
F
and Prune
90% kill
15 F
Apple
90% kill
15 F
Pear
90% kill
18 F
Peach
Tight cluster
White bud
Bloom
Swollen bud
White bud
10% kill
27 F
10% kill
26 F
10% kill
27 F
10% kill
27 F
10% kill
26 F
90% kill
21 F
90% kill
22 F
90% kill
24 F
90% kill
24 F
90% kill
21 F
Pink
Bloom
Petal fall
Bloom
Bloom
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
27 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
23 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
23 F
Bloom
Petal fall
Fruit set:
shucks on
Petal fall
Petal fall
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
24 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
23 F
Petal fall
Fruit set
Fruit set:
shucks off
Fruit set
Fruit set
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
10% kill
28 F
90% kill
25 F
90% kill
24 F
90% kill
25 F
Fruit set
10% kill
28 F
90% kill
25 F
Chapter 16
Codling Moth
Following are the stages in the life cycle
of the codling moth, which typically produces three generations per year.
It overwinters as a mature larva under
loose bark on trees, in leaf litter under
trees, or in other protected places.
It pupates in spring and emerges as an
adult in late May to early June.
Adults begin depositing eggs two or
three days after emergence and continue
depositing eggs for a month.
Eggs hatch in 12 to 14 days, and larvae
enter fruit.
Larvae feed for about three weeks then
pupate in protected places.
Second-generation adults emerge one to
two weeks later, in early July.
These adults lay eggs on fruit during July
and August.
Eggs hatch in six to seven days, and larvae enter fruit to feed.
Larvae stay in fruit for a month then
emerge and look for overwintering sites.
Chapter 16
Blossom sprays
Ideally, blossom sprays should be applied
at three stages: pink, full-bloom, and
petal-fall (Figure 3). Use fungicides and
insecticides listed in the UK Cooperative
Extension publication Disease and Insect
Control Programs for Homegrown Fruit in
Kentucky Including Organic Alternatives
(ID-21).
Summer Sprays
If an orchard has a mite, aphid, or scale
problem, a dormant oil spray in winter
can reduce populations of these insects.
However, some summer control often is
necessary.
Look for scale in June. The timing of
summer control is important for these tiny
insects. You must apply the spray when
the insects are in the crawler stage, which
is when the young scales move out from
their protective shells and are vulnerable to
pesticides.
Chapter 16
Bagging
Bagging individual apples and pears on a
tree when they are about an inch in diameter provides excellent insect and disease
control for the rest of the season. See the
Apple Bagging Alternative Pest Management
for Hobbyists (ENTFACT-218) and the
video Apple Bagging (VHO-1386). Both are
available through county extension offices.
Pruning
Pruning is a necessary part of home
orchard care. Prune trees to direct growth,
maintain health, and manage fruit-bearing
potential. For a more complete discussion
of pruning, see Chapter 4. The discussion
here covers only guidelines specific to pruning fruit trees.
Fruiting Habits
Pruning strategy should take into
account the fruiting habit of each tree. The
type and age of wood that bears fruit varies
with the kind of tree. Some fruits bear on
more than one kind of wood. For example:
Persian walnuts produce fruit on the current seasons shoots.
Hazelnuts, nectarines, and peaches produce fruit on the previous seasons shoots.
Sour cherries, some apples, and some
pears produce fruit on the previous seasons spurs and shoots.
Some apples, sour cherries, sweet cherries, pears, and plums (European and
Japanese) produce fruit on long-lived
spurs.
Pruning Guidelines
Prune all fruit and nut trees at planting time. Cut just above the height
where you want the lowest branches to
grow (usually 30 to 40 inches above the
ground).
Prune young trees very lightly; heavy
pruning delays fruiting.
Prune mature trees more heavily, especially if they have shown little growth.
Prune the top portion of trees more
heavily than the lower portion.
Train young trees in the first few years
after planting to avoid corrective pruning
later. Spread main scaffolds to a 45 to 60
angle from the trunk.
To keep trees small (unless they are
dwarf trees) prune moderately every
year and do not apply excess fertilizer,
manure, or compost.
Prune during the dormant season (after
fall or early winter freezes, but before full
bloom in spring).
When removing large limbs, first cut
partially through from the underside
about 6 inches out from the collar, then
make a second cut from the top a little
farther out, cutting all the way through
until the branch falls away. Finally, cut
the stub back to the branch collar. Do not
remove the branch collar.
There is no need to paint pruning
wounds. The best protection for a wound
is to leave the branch collar intact so
the tree is protected from wood-rotting
fungi.
Chapter 16
Nuts
Fruit/General
Disease and Insect Control Programs for
Homegrown Fruit in Kentucky Including
Organic Alternatives, 2008 (ID-21)
http://www.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/id/
id21/id21.pdf
Fertility Guidelines for Home Fruit & Nut
Plantings (HortFact-3004) http://www.
uky.edu/Ag/Horticulture/fertilityguides.
pdf
Fruit Insect-Pest Calendar for Kentucky
http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/fruitcalendar.asp
Home Composting: A Guide to Managing
Yard Waste (HO-75) http://www.ca.uky.
edu/agc/pubs/ho/ho75/ho75.pdf
Home Fruit Variety Recommendations,
2007 (HortFact-3003) http://www.uky.
edu/Ag/Horticulture/homefruitrec07.
pdf
Fruit and Nut Cultivar Nursery Sources,
2007 (HortFact-3002) http://www.
uky.edu/Ag/Horticulture/frtnursery07sources.pdf
Fruit and Vegetable Ripening Dates in
Kentucky (HortFact-3000) http://www.
uky.edu/Ag/Horticulture/ripedate06.pdf
Rootstocks for Kentucky Fruit Trees (HO82, revised) http://www.ca.uky.edu/agc/
pubs/ho/ho82/ho82.pdf
Reproducing Fruit Trees by Graftage:
Budding and Grafting (HO-39) http://
www.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/ho/ho39/
ho39.pdf
Cultivar Evaluations of Apple, Peach and
Grape (new resource) http://www.uky.
edu/Ag/Horticulture/masabni/cvevaluation.htm
Fruit and Vegetable Insect and Disease
Identification Picture Sheets, http://
www.uky.edu/Ag/IPM/picturesheets/
picturesheets.htm
Dry Pesticide Rates for Hand-Held Sprayers
(HO-83) http://www.uky.edu/Ag/
Horticulture/masabni/Publications/
HO-83.pdf
Tree Fruit
Apple Scab (PPA-24) http://www.ca.uky.
edu/agc/pubs/ppa/ppa24/ppa24.htm
Bagging Apples: Alternative Pest
Management for Hobbyists
(ENTFACT-218) http://www.ca.uky.
edu/entomology/entfacts/ef218.asp
Apple Cultivar Performance
(HortFact-3006) (new resource) http://
www.uky.edu/Ag/Horticulture/masabni/Publications/applecultivar.pdf
Cherry Fruit Flies (ENTFACT-217) http://
www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/
ef217.asp
Codling Moth (ENTFACT-203) http://
www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/
ef203.asp
Controlling Apple Insect Pests
(ENTFACT-201) http://www.ca.uky.
edu/entomology/entfacts/ef201.asp
European Red Mite (ENTFACT-205)
http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/ef205.asp
Fire Blight (PPA-34) http://www.ca.uky.
edu/agc/pubs/ppa/ppa34/ppa34.htm
Green Fruitworms (ENTFACT-214) http://
www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/
ef214.asp
Growing Peaches in Kentucky (HO-57)
http://www.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/ho/
ho57/ho57.pdf
Peach Fruit Diseases (PPFS-FR-T-09)
(new resource) http://www.ca.uky.edu/
agcollege/plantpathology/ext_files/
PPFShtml/PPFS-FR-T-9.pdf
Chapter 16
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Programs, University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Lexington, and Kentucky State University, Frankfort. Copyright 2012 for materials developed by University of
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