Top Fruit Flashcards

1
Q

Apples - Dessert and Cooking

A

Dessert
Eg. Fiesta (AGM) - spur fruiting. Heavy crop of medium to large fruit, excellent flavour. Keeps well. Late season variety.
Cooking
Bramley’s Seedling (AGM) - partial tip fruiting. Good crop of juicy apples. Triploid. Very vigorous, needs to be on a dwarfing rootstock.

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2
Q

Storage - conditions

A

Only apples and pear can be stored for any length of time in there natural form; even then only some cultivars are suitable.
Storage conditions are: Dark, temp between 5-10 degrees C, Moist, Some air circulation, Frost proof.
Later varieties tend to keep longer.

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3
Q

Storing apples and pears.

A

On slatted trays, fruits not touching - maximum air circulation.
Wrapping in greaseproof paper can extend storage period.

Placed in unsealed plastic bags with holes in them.

Pears are stored in the same way but without wrapping.

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4
Q

Storing other fruits

A

Most fruits can be frozen.

Some are suitable for preserving (eg. Jam or chutney)

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5
Q

Apple

Pest

A

Codling moth - lays eggs in the leaves in June/July, caterpillars hatch 2 weeks later. Tunnel into fruit. Maggot holes can sometimes be seen, though sometimes in calyx and not obvious. Holes extend to core. Physical cont

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6
Q

Apple Disease

A

Apple and Pear Canker
Fungal infection - wind borne spores in spring cause infection through damaged parts of plant.
Symptoms - bark cracks and dies in increasing, concentric rings leaving a marked scar. Cambium layer is killed and if it encircles the stem the stem will die.
Treatment - cut out stem and treat with canker paint or remove whole branch, cutting well below affected area.
Prefers wet, heavy and/or acid soils - check drainage and lime if necessary.
Check variety: some are resistant and some more susceptible.
No chemicals available to amateur.

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7
Q

Pear varieties

A

Conference (AGM). Reliable, regular heavy crop. Juicy and sweet fruit.

Concorde (AGM) comparatively new variety; heavy yield of high quality fruit

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8
Q

Pear

Pest

A

Pear leaf blister mite:
Overwinter on dormant buds, increase in summer and feed on young leaves.
Symptoms - green pustules on leaves in May, turn brown/black in summer. Premature leaf fall and severely affected young plants may die.
No pesticide control.
Hand pick and destroy affected leaves ASAP

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9
Q

Pears

Disease

A

Fireblight.
Bacterial disease. Transmitted by insects, rain or wind. Enters through lesions or stomata.
Late spring/early summer time of maximum risk - when bacteria emerges from dormant period and oozing from canker is most noticeable.
Symptoms - area appeared blackened, shrunken and cracked as if scorched by fire.
Treatment - prune out and burn infected branches, prune well back from the last visible sign of disease.
No chemicals are available to amateur.

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10
Q

Plum Varieties

A

Victoria (AGM) - self fertile, heavy crops, large plum. Good dessert and eating plum.
Czar (AGM) reliable, self-fertile plum. Heavy crop of medium sized plums.

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11
Q

Pruning plums.

A

Plums fruit at the base of 1year old wood and on spurs of older wood.
Prune in June/July - reduces risk of silver leaf.
Little pruning is necessary, use renewal method to keep tree productive.
Prunes grown in a fan shape should be pruned as restricted apples.

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12
Q

Plums pollination and fruit thinning

A

Many plums are self fertile.
Some require pollination.
Some cultivars are incompatible.

Thin fruit to 5 - 10 cm apart.

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13
Q

Plum.

Pest.

A

Plum sawfly.
Females lay eggs in April/May and the larvae hatch in about a week and tunnel into fruit.

Symptoms - entry holes in fruit, may cause premature fruit fall.
Victoria and Czar are particularly vulnerable.

Treatment - spray with deltamethrin after petal fall.
Pick of affected fruits and destroy.
Mix of nematodes.

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14
Q

Plum.

Disease.

A

Silver leaf.
Fungal disease.
Symptoms - Leaves have silver colour, shoots can die back to the shoots and eventually whole tree if not treated. Affected branches may be stained dark brown.
Treatment - no chemical control available.
Cut diseased branches back 50cm below the signs of infection.
Plants sometime recover spontaneously.

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15
Q

Winter pruning.

Apples and Pears - spur fruiting.

A

Remove dead, diseased and crossing branches.
Remove unproductive wood and water shoots.
Reduce new growth on leaders by one third.
Prune laterals to three or four buds.
Thin Spurs if too congested.

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16
Q

Winter pruning.

Apples and pears - tip fruiting.

A

Remove dead, diseased and crossing wood.
Reduce branch leaders by one third.
Leave laterals with fruit buds on tips.
Prune other laterals to three to four buds from base of new growth to encourage fruiting laterals.

17
Q

Summer pruning.

Apples and pears in restricted forms.

A

Shorten leaders to 2cm to 3 cm new growth.
Prune laterals to three buds.
Thin Spurs.
Remove misplaced shoots; for examples ones growing in to the wall.

18
Q

Top fruit.

Tree forms

A

Unrestricted - standard, half standard and bush forms. Grown on semi dwarfing or vigorous root stock, with exception of plum they are winter pruned.

19
Q

Top fruit.

Tree forms

A

Restricted - espalier, cordon, fan.
Grown on dwarf stock or semi dwarfing root stock.
Summer pruned.

20
Q

Advantages of restricted form.

A

Earlier fruiting.
More fruit/varieties in less space.
Fit in small spaces.
Easier to spray and harvest.

21
Q

Disadvantages of restricted form.

A

Grown on dwarfing stock they require better soil and are less tolerant of drought.
Pruning is a more skilled job.
Not suitable for tip bearing varieties.

22
Q

Cherries.

Sweet and Acid

A

Sweet-eaten as a dessert eg.Stella (AGM)
Acid-used for cooking and jams eg. Morello (AGM)
Both of these types are self fertile.

23
Q

Growing sweet cherries and acid cherries

A

Sweet cherries require a sunny, sheltered spot.

Acid cherries will grow in some shade and even on a north wall.

24
Q

Pruning sweet cherries

A

Fruits at the base of the previous year’s growth and older wood.
Prune in late spring to avoid the possibility of silver leaf and bacterial canker.
Remove shoots growing into wall.
Pinch out other shoots when they have made 5 to 6 leaves.
After cropping shorten shoots to 3 buds.

25
Q

Pruning acid cherries.

A

Fruits on shoots made in the previous year.
Prune in late spring to avoid shiver leaf and bacterial canker.
Remove shoots growing into wall.
Thin out previous year’s shoots to 10cm apart (approx).
After fruiting cut out shoots that have fruited.
Tie in some of the new year’s growth - this will fruit in the following year.

26
Q

Thinning harvesting cherries.

A

No need to thin- cherries drop part of crop as fruit is ripening.
Pick with stalks when ripe.

27
Q

Cherry.

Pest.

A

Winter moth; affects many trees and shrubs.
Females up trunk and lay eggs in the main section of tree.
Caterpillars feed on leaves, blossoms and young fruitlets in spring.
Symptoms - holes in leaves.
Treatment - sticky grease band around the trunk when females might be making their way up the trunk ( Oct to April)
Spray with appropriate pesticide.

28
Q

Cherry.

Disease

A

Silver leaf - see plum