Thursday, February 06, 2014

Snow! 2.06.14

Front View 2/6/13
First big snow of the winter.  It's been snowing all day.  We could not make it to Battleground today to check on things.  I think it will be ok.

Yesterday felt bitter cold, but was only into 20s.  I am not so rugged any more.

Sunday, February 02, 2014

January temperatures. Some more lows predicted for early February

Jan was milder than Dec
This is prediction from WeatherUnderground.com.  It's been mild for most of Jan.  Many trees have small buds.  Some major freezing expected.
Sunday, Feb 2

46 | 30 °F
Partly Cloudy
20%

Monday, Feb 3
41 | 26 °F
Partly Cloudy
20%

Tuesday, Feb 4
33 | 18 °F
Partly Cloudy
10%

Wednesday, Feb 5
30 | 15 °F
Clear
0%

Thursday, Feb 6


32 | 16 °F

Clear 

0%
Friday, Feb 7
36 | 23 °F
Clear
0%
Saturday, Feb 8
33 | 28 °F
Overcast
20%
Sunday, Feb 9
41 | 35 °F
Ice Pellets
80%

Friday, January 31, 2014

Puttering. Noting harvest times on labels. Covered bed didn't work. 1.31.14

Tree Labels Showing Harvest Times.

Plastic Raised Bed Cover Didn't Work.
Each year we lose some apples and pears because I don't know when they are ripe.  Some ripen August, some September, some October.

I don't know why this didn't occur to me before.

I made embossed labels showing the expected ripening time for each variety.  It took some time to look them up.  But now I have that info on the blog, where I can find it, and on the trees, where can also find it.

These labels don't last forever.  They corrode.  But they last a lot longer than Sharpie on plastic.

The raised bed cover collected water and sagged inward, to the ground.  The hoops bent due to the water weight.  I removed the cover, and cut a new one from water-permeable row cover.  The hoops are almost back to their original shape.

I might try again on the narrower bed.  Steeper sides.  Might need better ribs to prevent sagging.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Apple Tree Variety Spreadsheet. 1.30.14

I put together this spreadsheet for my apple varieties.  It takes time to find info about pollen compatibility, disease resistance, heritage.   Sources are mainly raintreenursery.com (RT) and orangepippin.com (OP).  Not the best spreadsheet but the program is free via google (checkmate Microsoft!)
Apple Tree Varieties



























VarietySourceApprox ageBearing?Bloom time (RT)Ripe? (RT)Potential PollenizersYear IntroducedDisease Resistance (OP)Notes










LibertyRaintree10 yearsyesearly-midEarly Octsterile triploid1978good
HoneycrispRaintree4 yearsyes/nomid-lateEarly Oct
1960smixed
JonagoldRaintree6 yearsyesmidMid Octsterile triploid1943poor
North PoleLocal12 yearsyesmidMid Sept

?Columnar
Scarlet SentinelLocal2 yearsnoearly - midLate Sept
1986yes (raintree)Columnar.
Golden SentinelLocal2 yearsyesmidEarly Oct
1986yes (forestfarm)Columnar.
Esopus SpitzenbergGrafting class1 yearnomidLate Oct
early 1800spoorI grafted 3/2013
Sutton BeautyGrafting class1 yearno??

?I grafted 3/2013
PristineRaintree 3-way0 yearn/aearly-midAugust
1994mixedmultigraft
RubinetteRaintree 3-way0 yearn/amidEarly Oct
1964partialhighly rated
Queen CoxRaintree 3-way0 yearn/amid-lateEarly Sept
1975partialmultigraft
JonaredStarks0 yearn/a(mid)Late
1934poorJonathan sport. 
Prairie Fire CrabHome Depot0 yearn/a?n/an/a
goodNo edible fruit.
Karmijn de SonnavilleRaintree3 year1 apple 2013midMid Octsterile triploid1949poorcox pippin X jonathan


Golden Sentinel is a cross between Wijcik spur MacIntosh and Golden Delicious. 1986. Agriculture; Agri-Food Canada, in Summerland, British Columbia

Scarlet Sentinel is a cross between  Wijcik spur MacIntosh and Golden Delicious. 1986. Agriculture; Agri-Food Canada, in Summerland, British Columbia

Honeycrisp patent is expired.   Honeycrisp was developed at the University of Minnesota, in 1974.  Cross of Macoun x Honeygold.

Jonagold was developed in  1953 as a cross between Jonathan and Golden Delicious.

Pristine was developed in 1975 at Purdue, as part of Purdue / Rutgers / Illinois consortium.  Pristine has in its ancestry Rome Beauty, Golden Delicious, MacIntosh, Starking Delicious, Malus floribunda, and others.

I'm still looking for info about the others.









Fruit Tree Shipment. Raintree Nursery. Apples, Jujube, Peach. 1.30.14

 The order from Raintree Nursery came today.  I've ordered from them many times.  As always, very well packaged.  The packing is shredded used paper, so environmentally friendly.  Compostable.  Based on this and other experiences, Raintree is AAA in my book.

The trees are very nice size.  I'm very impressed.  A little taller than the box, so bent over a little.  Not injured, straighten up nicely out of the box.

The miltigraft apple is Rubinette, Queen Cox, and Pristine.  Each branch is labeled.  All are listed as disease resistant.  In this climate, disease resistant is important.

When I get them to Battleground, I'll plant them and addend this post.

The Jujube looks many-times larger than the ones I bough 18 months ago at One Green World.  Those barely grew last year, so are still only about a foot.  This will need a pollenizer, but it's a start.

Now anxious to get out and plant.  Later today.  Good day for planting, overcast, cool, not pouring rain.  Yet.

The peach is Q-1-8.  Again, bought for reported disease resistance.  So frustrating to lose peaches to leaf curl.
Packaged Fruit Trees.
I take photos of the roots and newly planted trees, so there is reference I can look back too.  It helps me remember what I've done.

Q-1-8 is listed as peach-leaf-curl resistant, tested at the Washington State testing station at Mount Vernon "A sweet and flavorful semi-freestone, white fleshed peach. Great for fresh eating. Ripens early August. Showy blossoms. Self fertile".  Most peaches are self fertile.  Not that they would say one is not sweet or flavorful  :-)

Of the Apples, all 3 sound interesting.



Apple Roots

3-way Multigraft Apple

Q-1-8 Peach Roots





Q-1-8 Peach