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I have two older peach trees that have fruit but only ...

Sent to General Experts June 24 2006 at 9:03 AM
   

I have two older peach trees that have fruit but only grow to about the size of a golf ball, never turn ripe and fall off the tree at the end of their season. what's wrong? I have used fruit tree spikes (2 each tree) for the last two years. I have pruned both trees with no results. I have plum, orange, pear, avacado and fig trees all doing well, please help!

Bill

 

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June 24 2006 at 9:48 AM (45 minutes and 47 seconds later)
         
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peaches
Peaches present the paradox that they'll grow in almost any part of the country, but can be grown well in very few. Still, the smallest peach from your own tree will be tastier than most store-bought ones, even though peaches ship better than many fruits.

The peach needs both cold (below 40°F.) and warmth. Without a winter cold snap, the trees skip their dormant period and become too exhausted to bear. On the other hand, the early-flowering buds are very cold-sensitive. One frost and you're wiped out. And without summer warmth the fruit will not mature. Even so, the geographical range for homegrown peaches is almost nationwide, so try a few trees if at all possible.

STOCK
Since peach trees are so widespread but variable in adaptation, it's important to get stock suitable for your region. There are literally thousands of varieties, and although there is none best suited for downtown San Francisco or mid-Manhattan, there is a variety best for your farm. The trees are for the most part self-pollinating. But it's never a good idea to have less than two or three trees of any given fruit.

You'll get your first peaches after three or four years . . . the big yields will take another three. At that stage of the game you can count on four bushels per healthy tree. Spring planting is the best. A sandy or gravelly loam is preferred. Use a northern slope to delay blossoming if you're in an area of late frost.

PRUNING
Prepare to butcher your peach tree when you plant it. Peaches don't take too well to transplanting, so you will have to cut back the tops severely in order to encourage root development. Trim the leader back almost a third of the total plant height, making sure to cut just above a branch. The new leader will emerge from the junction and you don't want dead wood above it. Prune all the branches back to one and two-inch stubs. The effect you want is a spiked miniflagpole. From the stubs eliminate all but three or four of the new buds that appear in the summertime. The object of the game is to develop a tree with three or four main branches rising together . . . in other words, a treehouse tree rather than a climbing one.

Regular spring maintenance pruning is the same as for other trees. Get rid of dead branches and shape the tree to be open and without crisscrossing branches. Also, when the tree begins to bear, you will have to thin out fruit growing too close together. One peach to every four or five inches of branch is plenty for it to bear. Even so, if a mature tree lets its branches droop heavily with fruit, you may have to support the branches with braces. Peach trees are prone to natural pruning, that is, branches break off from the weight of too much fruit.

PROBLEMS
Most peach tree problems will not strike a healthy tree. And those that are serious enough to destroy the tree won't be stopped by all the chemicals or anything else around, unless you kill the tree first anyhow. So sit back and let nature take its course. Fertilize your trees with nitrogen-rich compost in early spring to boost plant growth. Mulch the orchard, but keep the mulch at least two feet from the trunks to minimize peach tree borers. Prune away dead branches and those with injured bark, and pick off any strange bugs or their nests that you spot.

HARVESTING
Pick peaches when soft enough to give slightly under light thumb pressure. You've squeezed peaches at your local green-grocer's. Same principle, different fruit . . . the ones you pick ripe off the tree are much more nourishing. Twist fruit up and out as with others.

Peaches not fully ripe can be picked for storage if the season is running out on you, but be sure not to bruise them. Even gently harvested, they won't store for more than three or four weeks in a cool cellar.


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June 24 2006 at 10:24 AM (35 minutes and 26 seconds later)
         
Reply to Shelia's Post: that didn't answer what's wrong with the trees and specifically what they need.
Answer
June 24 2006 at 10:44 AM (20 minutes and 21 seconds later)
         
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You want the trees to build structure the first two to three years, not fruit. Once they set fruit, all the energy goes into building that fruit. The large crop sapped all the energy from the plants and they are now rebuilding for next year's crop. You most likely will have a large crop next year. Resist the temptation to save the fruit by thinning heavily to bring the trees back into balance.

Q: My peaches were golf ball size while my neighbors' were big. How can I improve mine?

A: You can't do anything now. It all began after bloom last spring when they set on. Next year, right after bloom, remove all the poorly deformed fruit. A few days later, remove more until there is 4 inches between each fruit. Now the next part you can't see but here's what is going on inside your tree. There is a flush of twig growth after fruit set that produces leaves out beyond the fruit. These leaves generate energy that develops the stone or pit. If you notice, the fruit gets a certain size and never seems to grow. Well inside the fruit, the pit is maturing. Next the plant lays down fruit buds for the following year out in the new flush of growth. Now the energies shift to developing the flesh or meat or what you drool about eating. Of course, this can't become a reality if you fail to water and fertilize right. That is why your early spring feedings are so critical and deep irrigations are so important in that last month of developing fruit.

Pruning and thinning are required for healthy trees and for the consistent production of large fruit. Pruning encourages the vigorous growth required for annual production and keeps trees manageable. Prune stone fruit trees to an open center. Thin by hand about the time small fruits are the diameter of a dime. After thinning, the Peaches should be at least 6 inches apart

Managing Fruit Trees In The Home Landscape
http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/extension/fruitgarden/managing.html#training

The average lifespan of orchard trees is five years or less

Edited by she3115 on June 24 2006 at 10:56 AM



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