Growing Fruit Trees 2055 Springhill Road PO Box Bozeman MT

Similar documents
2017 FRUIT CHART APPLES PEARS PLUMS NECTARINES APRICOTS PEACHES CHERRIES

Apple Varieties Storage Chart

2018 Small Fruit Plant Sale Variety Information

2017 Annual 4-H Plant Sale

FRUIT TREES/SHRUBS 2014

2019 Small Fruit Plant Sale Variety Information

HISTORY USES AND HEALTH BENEFITS. Figure 31. Nanking cherries

FRUIT TREES FRUIT TREES AT OAKLAND NURSERY. Introduction:

2019 Annual 4-H Plant Sale

DEADLINE FOR ALL ORDERS: FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 2018 HOW TO ORDER:

FRUIT TREES, BUSHES, AND VINES. An excellent eating or pie apple. Ripens later and keeps longer than McIntosh. Blooms mid-season. 5 Gal Cont 42.

FRUIT TREES, BUSHES, AND VINES. An excellent eating or pie apple. Ripens later and keeps longer than McIntosh. Blooms mid-season. 5 Gal Cont..45.

Understock: Semi-Dwarf (M-106), Dwarf (M-26) or Extreme Dwarf (M-27) APPLES Requires Name Dwarf Information Pollinizer

2018 Fruit Trees All fruit trees are semi-dwarf (15-20 ft. tall) unless otherwise noted.

AVOCADO FARMING. Introduction

Dwarf Sour Cherries. History. Uses. Biology. Biology and Cultivars 2/14/2018

The Crunch Factor: Apple Development at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum

Avocado Farming. Common varieties grown in Kenya

GANTER NURSERY: FRUIT TREES 2018

Blueberries. Bush Habit. Fruit. Blueberry Season Early = June-mid July Mid = Late July-mid Aug. Bush Habit. Fruit. Brunswick. Top Hat.

Norway Spruce Colorado Blue Spruce Scotch Pine White Spruce White Pine Douglas Fir

Bernadine Strik, Professor, Oregon State University 1

Apricot. Pruning. Fruit Fly

Fruit Tree List. Apples

GANTER NURSERY: FRUIT TREES 2017

Help Support Alamance County 4-H

Tangerines, Mandarins, Satsumas, and Tangelos

Planting Trees for Energy Savings. Jesse Randall ISU Forestry Extension

Prepared by: Shawn Banks and Amie Newsome Johnston County Extension Agents Agriculture - Horticulture

6600 SW Philomath Blvd., Corvallis, OR ~ (541)

Tangerines, Mandarins, Satsumas, and Tangelos

How to Grow Lime Tree

Small Fruit. Less successful. Successful in Montana. Refers not just to the size of the fruit, but rather the size of the plant.

Help Support Alamance County 4-H

Growing Tree and Bush Fruits in Alaska

Ageratum. Soft Fruit. Gooseberry Hinnonmaki Yellow. Redcurrant Rovada. Blackcurrant Ben Tirran (P) (P) Barcode. Height/Spread

Tree Fruits. Tree Fruit Overview. Melanie W. Barrow ANR, Horticulture Extension Agent Henry County-Martinsville

2012 TREE SALE - ORDER FORM

Unique and Unusual Plants

2/13/2012. Blueberries: Spartan. Earliblue. Blueberries: Wonderful fruit & Great Ornamentals. Master Gardener Handbook

F R U I T S W: 1.5-2' #2 gallon Avail Now Call Baker's at for more details. Half Day Sun. Call Baker's at for more details

H1558 (Revised) Starting a Community Orchard in North Dakota

SHADE TREES Prices vary from $49.95 to $79.95

CRAWFORD SWCD 2019 TREE SALE

COLD HARDY GRAFTED AVOCADOS Avocados were first introduced in Florida in 1833 & are sometimes called alligator pears.

Species: Malus spp. Flowering Crabapple. (may'lus flo-ri-bun'dah) Cultivar Information

STEELE SWCD TREE PROGRAM BY THE STEELE COUNTY SWCD OFFICE

Growing Healthy Christmas Trees

WESTPORT IN BLOOM 12th annual TREE SALE TREE DESCRIPTIONS. TO ORDER:

Cacanska.Lepotica. Prunus domestica Bluefre. Prunus domestica Peachy

Growing Plums in Connecticut

Small Fruit Production. Mike Pace USU Extension Agent Box Elder County

Westlock Tree Makers 2018 Tree Species

Type Description Uses Flavor Pollinator Height Width Fresh eating, pies and desserts Sweet, crisp and juicy Pollinator-use 8ft to 10ft 1ft to 2ft

GANTER NURSERY: FRUIT TREES 2011

AVOCADOS IN THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY

Prepared by Louise Ferguson, Mark Bell, Mark Henderson

Ison s Nursery & Vineyard Planting Instructions Pakistan Mulberry Trees

Required Pollinator. Up to six varieties budded on to a Heyer s 12. Honey Combination 5m (16 ) 4m (13 )

Physiology, Orchard Establishment, Cultivars, Training/Pruning. Lenny Wells UGA Extension Horticulture

SHADE TREES Prices vary from $49.95 to $79.95

Refers not just to the size of the fruit, but rather the size of the plant. Most small fruits are selffruitful

All Time Favorites Still Available

Week Num, Northern H

Apples Akane Apple - Eating - Medium to - Bright Red - Pure White - Groups 2, 3, 4 - Late Sept to - Desert Apple

Dr. Bob Bors Department of Plant Sciences

U-Pick and Small Market Blueberry Cultivars for Mississippi S.J. Stringer and D.A. Marshall-Shaw USDA-ARS TCSHL, Poplarville, MS

Please do not write on or remove from the classroom.

Extension Service. Growing Tree Fruits and Nuts. In the Home Orchard. Contents

Yellow wood tree Cladrastis kentukea

COMBINATION TREES (MULTI-GRAFT TREES) AND ESPALIERS

PLUM AND STONE FRUIT HYBRIDS

Unit E: Fruit and Nut Production. Lesson 6: Production of Pomegranate

Peach varieties available from Vineland

Bernadine Strik, Professor, Oregon State University 1

Fruit that Rocks in the Landscape. Stanton Gill, Extension Specialist, University of Maryland Extension

Fruit Trees 2018 Blue - New Stock 2018 Common name Zone Self-Pollinating Cross-Pollination Description Harvest Time

The person charging this material is responsible for

Converse County Conservation District

F R U I T S & N U T S

Fruit Catalog 2018 Berry Blackberry 'Thornless Triple Crown'

Fungal Fungal Disease Citrus Black Black Spot Guignardia Guignardia citricarpa ): Id I entifi f catio ion io, Biology Biology and and Control

Suitable Flowering Trees for Fair Lakes Court Available at Merrifield Garden Center, Fair Oaks

Sour Citrus: Lemons, Limes, Calamondins, Limequats and the Thai Lime Leaf

Table of Contents Small Trees Pg. 1-5 Medium Trees Pg Large Trees Pg

Organic Newsletter. Summer Edition, Seed Saving!

Malus domestica Geneva Early

MSU Extension Publication Archive. Scroll down to view the publication.

Agriculture & Natural Resources

2019 CLEMATIS & VINE CLEMATIS $19.99 each OTHER ASSORTED VINES $ $24.99 each. clematis.

Waldo County Soil and Water Conservation District Annual Fruit Tree and Shrub Sale

Gold Leaf Nursery Bare Root Stock

gooseberries jostaberries

Small and Compact Ornamental Trees

Espalier means a tree trained flat to form a living fence. They can be planted along a wall or in place of a fence.

BLUEBERRIES. 3 different varieties in 1 pot. Perfect for patios or All smaller gardens.

Common Problems in Grape Production in Alabama. Dr. Elina Coneva Department of Horticulture, Auburn University

Fruit Trees for

Vineyard IPM Scouting Report for week of 12 July 2010 UW-Extension Door County and Peninsular Agricultural Research Station Sturgeon Bay, WI

Feed Denver Fruit Tree & Bush Sale, 2014

Transcription:

Growing Fruit Trees 2055 Springhill Road PO Box 10242 Bozeman MT 59719 406-587-3406 Fruit trees are a beautiful addition to your ornamental and edible landscape. Growing fruit trees can also be a rewarding hobby. Hardy varieties of apple, apricot, cherry, pear, plum, and plumcherry trees do well in Southwest Montana. We carry select varieties for our high altitude and short growing season. Care and Planting. Select a sunny site for your fruit trees, preferably with some shelter from the prevailing winds. Do not plant fruit trees in hollows or pockets where frost would settle. Space apple trees about 25 feet apart. The smaller fruit trees: dwarf apple, apricot, cherry, pear, and plum can be planted as close together as 10-15 feet. High density planting or training methods, such as orchard culture or espalier can be accomplished through thoughtful planning and specific pruning. Plant the graft (the bulge near the union of root and top) at soil level. Leave a depression around the tree for a watering well. Frequent watering (once or twice a week depending upon conditions) is necessary the first few years and during any dry period, thereafter, to establish a healthy tree. Cultivating around the tree and a regular fertilizing program will also encourage fruiting. Apricots, plums, and cherries can be expected to bear fruit 2-3 years after planting. Pears and apples bear in 4-5 years depending upon the variety. Proper pruning in early spring is helpful to develop a satisfactory framework for fruit production. Pests and Diseases Fruit trees must be protected in the winter from Voles and Mice by wrapping up to the bottom branch with screen or some material through which rodents cannot penetrate. Repellants or fences are needed in areas where Deer might be a problem. Use trunk wraps to protect from Sunscald that blisters and splits bark in the winter. Fire blight is a bacterial disease that attacks apples, pears, and others in this family. It affects young twigs first, traveling down the shoot. The bark may look watery, dark green, or oily, and eventually splits. Leaves on affected twigs die, but persist. Fire blight is spread by insect pollinators and wind. It is seen more often after wet springs. To control, plant resistant varieties. If infected, prune out infected branches and sterilize pruners between cuts to avoid spreading the disease. Spraying does not cure Fire blight. However, trees can be sprayed with streptomycin sulfate to avoid infection. Spray first just before blossoms open and then continue every three days. Do not spray after fruit has formed. Cedar Apple Rust is a fungal disease that needs both cedars (upright junipers) and apple trees to complete its life cycle. The fungus forms galls on cedar trees, but it does the most damage to apple trees, forming yellow spots on the leaves and fruit and causing early leaf drop. If possible, do not plant apple trees within 100 of upright junipers. Control cedar apple rust by spraying with a fungicide such as Fung-onil or Daconil just before the blossoms open, again when the blossom petals are falling, and twice more up to the middle of June.

The Apple Maggot burrows into the fruit, streaking it brown and making it unappetizing. Control by placing traps in the tree early in the season to catch the flying stage of the maggot or spray the whole tree while the fruit is forming with any accepted fruit tree spray. Apples Probably the easiest fruit trees to grow in Southwestern Montana are apples and eating crabapples. Any two different varieties flowering at the same time and planted within 100 feet or so will provide pollination for each other. Ornamental flowering crabapples will also pollinate apples and eating crabapples. Apples that ripen early in the season (mid to late August) usually keep only a short time, even in cold storage. Generally, the later an apple ripens (September to October), the longer it will keep in cold storage. Apples can be left on the tree in the fall to temperatures as low as 25 degrees without harming the fruit. In fact, freezing temperatures are known to set the sugar in apples, making a better tasting fruit. Apples grafted onto a standard rootstock may grow to a height of 20-25', a width of 25' at maturity and bear after 5-7 years. Apples grafted onto a semi-dwarfing rootstock will grow to about 12-15' tall, 14' wide and bear after 4-5 years. Standard rootstock is hardy to zone 3 and semi-dwarf to zone 4, possibly zone 3 with >4" of snow cover in winter. Freedom, Haralred, Haralson, Honeycrisp, Liberty, Red Prairie Spy, Sweet Sixteen, Wealthy and Zestar varieties are available as semi-dwarf trees. Red Prairie Spy Mid Zone 4 Mid Susceptible Sweet Firm Baking Snow Sweet Mid Zone 3 Mid Moderate Apple Bloom Fire Blight Ripens Hardy Variety Time Resistance Flavor Texture Uses Freedom Mid Zone 4 Mid-late Very Sweet Crisp All Purpose Frostbite Mid Zone 3 Mid-late Moderate Sweet Firm Eating, Cider Goodland Mid Zone 3 Mid Moderate Juicy Crisp Eating Fresh Haralred Mid Zone 3 Late Very Firm Baking, Pies Haralson Late Zone 3 Late Very Firm Baking, Pies Hazen Early Zone 3 Early Moderate Mild Soft Eating Fresh Honeycrisp Late Zone 4 Mid Moderate Sweet Crisp Eating Fresh Honeygold Late Zone 4 Mid-late Susceptible Sweet Crisp Eating Fresh Liberty Early Zone 4 Mid Very Crisp All Purpose McIntosh Mid Zone 4 Mid Resistant Firm Eating Fresh Norland Early Zone 2 Early Moderate Mild Soft All Purpose Red Baron Mid Zone 3 Mid Resistant Sweet Crisp All Purpose Red Duchess Early Zone 3 Early Resistant Soft Pies, Sauce Crisp All Purpose

Apples (continued) More Apple Bloom Fire Blight Ripens Hardy Varieties Time Resistance Flavor Texture Uses State Fair Early Zone 3 Early Susceptible Juicy Crisp All Purpose Sweet 16 Mid Zone 3 Mid Resistant Sweet Crisp Dessert Wealthy Mid Zone 3 Earlymid Susceptible Firm Dessert Wolf River Mid Zone 3 Mid Moderate Juicy Tender Cooking Yellow Transparent Early Zone 3 Early Susceptible Mild Soft Pies Zestar Early Zone 4 Early Moderate Crisp Eating Fresh Crabapple Variety Ripens Hardy Bloom Time Fire Blight Resistance Flavor Uses Chestnut Late August Zone 3 Early-mid Resistant Nutty Eating Fresh Dolgo Aug-Oct Zone 2 Early Resistant Jelly Kerr Mid Sept Zone 3 N/A Moderate Sweet Cider, Jelly Whitney Mid/Late August Zone 3 Early Susceptible Sweet Eating Fresh Apricots We offer several varieties of Apricots proven hardy to our area. Trees bloom profusely in late April to early May. Blossoms are susceptible to frost, so while trees may not set fruit reliably, they maintain high ornamental value with a beautiful spring display of creamy white, pink blushed blossoms and colorful leaves in the fall. Trees are 10-15 tall and wide. Sungold and Moongold require separate varieties for pollination. While not required, self-fertile varieties can have improved yield through cross-pollination. Variety Ripens Hardiness Stone Flavor Texture Pollinator Uses Moongold Late July Zone 4 Free Sweet Juicy Sungold Fresh eating Pioneer Mid July Zone 4 Cling Sweet Juicy Self-fertile Fresh eating Chinese Scout August Zone 3 Free Mild Juicy Self-fertile Canning Sungold August Zone 4 Free Sweet Firm Moongold Fresh eating Westcot Late July Zone 3 Free Sweet Juicy Self-fertile All purpose

Pie Cherries Sweet cherries generally are not hardy enough for our area. However, pie cherries do grow well in our climate. Pie cherries, also called tart or sour cherries, are self-fertile and do not require another variety nearby to pollinate blossoms. cherry juice has recently gained popularity for its health benefits. A single Montmorency cherry tree can yield 40-50 quarts at maturity, enough for many pies or juice. Fruits are ½-1 in diameter and are tart to slightly sweet. As the cherries ripen, the trees should be protected with netting from birds, which love the ripening fruit. Jerry usually makes his first pie with very tart fruits around August 1 st. Cherry variety Height Ripens Flavor Fruit Color Hardiness Other Evan s Bali 15-20 Late August Sweeter Dark Red Zone 3 Hardy buds Mesabi 10-14 August Sweeter Bright Red Zone 4 Bing cross Meteor 10-14 August Sweeter Bright Red Zone 4 Genetic dwarf Montmorency 12-18 Late July Dark Red Zone 4 Very productive North Star 8-10 Late July Red Zone 4 Genetic dwarf Sweet Cherry Pie 15 July Dark Red Zone 3 Pie cherry, early Pears The following pear varieties have been developed for Northern climates. Pears ripen from late August (may be tart) to October in our area. Pears will be sweeter if they ripen on the tree, but should be harvested if temperature may drop below 25 degrees. You will need two different varieties for pollination. Luscious has sterile pollen and cannot be used as a pollinator. Golden Spice is our only cultivar resistant to fire blight. Except Ure, all our pears are grafted onto semidwarf rootstock, yielding mature trees 12-15 in height and width. Ure is grafted on a standard, resulting in a 20-25 size. Pear Variety Ripens Hardiness Flavor Texture Best Pollinator Uses Golden Spice September Zone 3 Mild Firm Ure Canning Luscious Mid-Sept Zone 4 Sweet Firm Parker Dessert Parker August Zone 3 Juicy Tender Patten Eating Fresh Patten Mid-Sept Zone 4 Juicy Tender Parker Eating Fresh Summer Crisp Mid-Aug Zone 3 Sweet Crisp Parker Eating Fresh Ure Late-Aug Zone 3 Juicy Firm Patten Canning

Plums and Plum-cherries American plum hybrids and cherry-plum hybrids need a pollinator to produce fruit. Toka and Mount Royal make the best pollinators for other plums. Wild American Plums will also work as pollinators. Mount Royal, Stanley, and other European plums are self-fertile but may produce more fruit with another variety nearby. Most plums ripen in late August except for Stanley, which ripens in early September, and Mount Royal, which ripens about Oct. 1st. For best growth, plant plums in an area protected from wind. Plum Variety Height Fruit Size Color Stone Hardiness Uses Alderman 10-15 Large Dark Red Cling Zone 4 Fresh Black Ice 6-10 Large Black Free Zone 3 All La Crescent 10-15 Medium Yellow Free Zone 4 Fresh, Jam Mount Royal 8-12 Small Purple Free Zone 4 Dessert Pipestone 10-15 Large Red Cling Zone 3 Fresh Stanley Prune 8-12 Medium Blue Free Zone 5 Fresh, Jam Toka 15-20 Medium Red Cling Zone 3 Pollinator Peaches Rare to our region, growing peach trees can provide backyard orchardists with a fun, challenging experiment. Like apricots, their beautiful blossoms are susceptible to frost. The long amount of time required for fruit ripening means that without special care, the trees do not go dormant early enough to survive our winter. We currently carry two varieties: Reliance and Contender.