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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Apples
Cooking Notes
- You can freeze apples by stewing washed chunks with a dash of water until they soften. Once ready, sieve and pour the stewed apples into containers, leaving a small space at the top as they will expand slightly when frozen, and pop into the freezer.
- You can also cut your fruits into thin slices then dry them out in a dehydrator to make a deliciously chewy and healthy snack.
- Planning to bake or cook your apples into an apple pie or meal? See our chart on the best baking and cooking apples in North America.
“Baked apples have an excellent effect upon the whole physical system, feeding the brain as well as adding to the flesh, and keeping the blood pure; also preventing constipation and correcting a tendency to acidity, which produces rheumatism and neuralgia.” –The 1898 Old Farmer’s
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We have 3 apple trees, 2 pear trees, 1 cherry, one plum tree, and 5 new nut trees. The apple trees are 5 years old, the pear are 8 years old. The cherry tree is 3 years old and the prune is 2 years old. The nut trees are 2 years old. They have yet to produce an apple, pear, cherry, or nuts. Last year we had lots of plums - this year none. There are blossoms (not many) except the plum tree had lots of blossoms this year. I used fertilizer on them 2 years ago as told by the local apple farmer - he said; "put 3 pounds of chicken poo fertilizer on them - that will produce fruit the next year." Well, the fertilizer did not work - no fruit was produced. I was pruning them to clear out the center until I watched our neighbors only apple tree produce many apples without being pruned or fertilized. Basically the neighbor neglects the tree. So that's what I am doing in the hope they will produce. Do you have any ideas why the trees are not producing?
There are a few reasons fruit trees do not bear fruit. Sometimes they are such vigorous growers that all of their energy goes into leaf and stem/branch production rather than fruit production. Other times, a late spring frost can prevent fruiting. The third most common reason is lack of or poor pollination.
This would have been our second year for our gala apple to bear fruit - unfortunately every apple (there were many) fell off or disappeared. They were very small and had black dots on them. We're so disappointed as we were expecting a large crop from our one tree.
A neighbor has a tree that produces many apples and we have also planted an apple in our back yard (which also lost all it's apples). What did we do wrong? We bought orchard insect spray and used it twice.
In order to get a good batch of crops more care and attention is needed for lovely delicious juicy growth of apples
Hi Catherine,
Your apple tree could be infected with the black pox fungus, which exhibits symptoms that include shiny black lesions on the fruit. Try treating your tree in the early spring with neem, jojobo, or horticultural oil to get ahead of the emerging fungal spores.
Hello I love this with all my heart. I have always had the dream to plant apple trees. I am a student in Africa studying agribusiness. I have a passion in the cultivation of apple trees but I have no one who can help me I am in Cameroon presisely in central Africa between Nigeria and Equatorial guinea. Please I need help from you I am really ready to learn in every way frankoj634@gmail.com is my email.
I'm a Ugandan by nationality, I stay here(Uganda) in a place called koboko located North West in the WestNile region, Am really interested in growing apples but I do not know if my location & weather will favour the plant. Please teach me more about planting them regarding where I am.
I need your advise on how apple tree could be prune in south west expecially in osogbo area in osun also is it possible that the root could sprute out? Please help me from osun state nigeria.Thanks.
Sir i want to plant a apple orchard on root stock ... plese telll me is root stock can plant with out dripping system if yes so which stock..
Not knowing where you live and what type of climate you have makes it hard to answer your question. Please go to the link below to read more about apple rootstock and the differences between them.
http://www.gardening.cornell.edu/factsheets/ecogardening/appleroot.html