fence builder put a nail in a tree ...
2 months ago
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Putting in fruit trees for the first time!
Comments (9)I'm a small handful of miles from you. (Oops, I was thinking Goodfield, about the same distance but the other way.) The Granny Smith will be pushing it some years. But probably better than what's in the stores but not fully ripe before you rescue it from freeze. You can leave apples on into the 20's so around here if you risk that cold snap at the beginning of November there's a good chance it will return to great apple ripening weather the rest of the month. I risked 27° this year with my Arkansas Black and got rewarded with plenty of time to get them fully ripe. Winesap will probably end up being your cider base. But I'm sure you'll find a use for the Honeycrisp if you decide you'd rather eat them than drink them. They don't last at all at the Upicks. Peach will probably be hit and miss. Sweet cherry is a pain. Both are candidates for borers. But you may get lucky. Borers hit fast in my yard. They haven't hit anything about a mile from me in a friend's yard (but he has lost 2 sweet cherries for some unknown reason, I also lost one mysteriously). I know sweet cherry can be grown around here. I knew an old guy in Creve Coeur that had one. So if you really want one keep on trying. For the borers spray permethrin, in August I think. You can search to find when they're laying. The Lesser Peach tree borer is what hits in my yard. Permethrin isn't rated for apples and I don't know what the rating is for sweet cherry or peach fruit but egg laying is after harvest so keep the trees separate from the apple trees so you don't get any overspray. Deer is a good warning. My niece is about halfway between me and you and the deer she once thought were cute are not so cute after eating her peach tree. She asked me if they'd be OK to remove the fences once the trees got full size and wasn't happy when I told her the bucks will rub their antlers and destroy a fruit tree. For your changed order, McIntosh also doesn't do good around here. It's too hot at ripening and lately too rainy. It's my favorite apple so I put up with it. It drops early and can shed the tree in the wrong weather, which we usually have at that time of year. It's usually too hot and humid but lately too hot and rainy. But it makes a great cider even grown here. Apricot will be like peach, hit and miss and susceptible to borers. But my nephew wanted one so I got him one for Christmas. On the years you get fruit it's a bigger reward. All will be susceptible to curculio which can be extremely bad. Spectracide Triazicide is effective on them and readily available at Walmart and Menards (you probably go to the ones about a mile from my house). When I last had plum trees and was organic out of three trees I think I managed to get one plum between the curculio nailing the fruit and the borers nailing the trees....See MoreNail in Oak Tree
Comments (10)awe pshaw ... if you have no inclination to cutting this thing down ... then marital discord is the issue ... will she poison you or not??? is this really the time and place to take a stand???? of all the things in the world to stand up about.. is this spike really important???? cant you just wait until late fall ... and remove it then .. when she is in the house for 6 months.. not thinking about it .. meanwhile discussing the issue ... and teaching about the risks??? negotiating 101 .... ken ps: just dont forget about it.. and leave it there for its next owner .......See Moreusing liquid nails, screws, and nails
Comments (10)Once a tree across the street from me was broken about four inches from the ground. Considering it wasn't my tree and it wasn't completely snapped in two, I went out with my cordless drill and some drywall screws and screwed it back together. The tree lived and eventually covered the screws only to succumb to verticillium wilt during a dry spell a few years later. Now this was a 2 inch thick Autumn Blaze maple (red x silver), so if any tree were to survive such an ordeal, that would be it. However I'd probably attempt the same or similar (duct tape, nails, rope, etc) fix again in the future if the situation came up....See MoreTruth or Myth: A Rusty Nail Can Stimulate Fruit Production.
Comments (66)So HU-335487372, you signed up with Houzz today and made this single post to claim that science is fake?? Anyone with half a brain knows better than that and if you have ever had to visit a doctor, you know that as well!! What a completely inane comment! Don't you have anything better to occupy your time with? If not, find something, as those sorts of comments are a waste of time and energy....See MoreRelated Professionals
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