Hi!
I’m new to this forum and to growing fruit trees. I’d love some advice on some ground rules or absolute musts with fruit trees. I know there is an enormous wealth of information out there, but the sheer amount of it feels overwhelming, so hearing some tips from real people with experience would be wonderful.
Our orchard background: we have an elongated acre in Virginia, on a mountainside (all sloped terrain). I believe we’re in zone 7a. We’ve cleared the overgrown jungle that used to be wild on the property and started adding fruit trees. The first trees were McIntosh and Golden Delicious, plus an apricot and fig (the apricot was eaten by deer who got through our fence, the fig died in the winter I think). We got those trees from a local nursery in 2021. The Golden Delicious seems to be suffering from Cedar Apple Rust (as best as i could google diagnose) but is still alive. The McIntosh had aphids on it and some of the leaves curled up. I tried to spray with Neem and it looks like the tree is still ok. I manually removed any baby apples I could find, thinking that for the first couple years the trees should focus on growing instead of fruiting (not sure if that was necessary or not).
Last year (summer-fall 2023) we cleared a lot more and added a bunch of trees:
- Arkansas Black Spur apple
- Montmorency Cherry
- Blenheim Apricot
- Walnut
- Allegheny Pawpaw & Wabash Pawpaw
- Plum tree (don’t remember the exact name at the moment)
- hazelnuts
My plan was to spray everything with Surround Clay according to instructions and hope for the best. However, since finding this forum, it’s beginning to sound like maybe I should plan on having a more elaborate spraying schedule with various solutions. I do hope to keep everything organic and safe for kids to pick the fruit and eat off the branch.
Since my baby trees are so new, I’m not sure what problems will arise in my exact location. I already know about the Cedar Rust and aphids… for other stuff, should i spray preventively, or wait to see what I’m dealing with? Might the Surround Clay stuff be enough?
Also, if anyone has any advice about the Golden Delicious with the Cedar Rust, I’d be happy to hear it. Is there any hope for the tree, or should I take it out? (That seems so hard to do, psychologically).
I also need advice for a pair for the Arkansas Black… might the McIntosh be a good pollinating pair? The trees are currently pretty far apart on different sides of the house, but I’m thinking I could move the McIntosh closer, it’s not very big yet.
Thanks so much for any advice!
- Anya
Pic attached – our baby orchard as of late October 2023. Cherry and plum closer to center, ArkBlack to the right, Pawpaw at the edge on the right. Not visible through the pine branches – walnut.