GROW FRUIT TO IMPRESS
The world we live in seems to change at an ever increasing
speed and the older generation struggles to keep up with technological
improvements. We spend hours trying to understand how to work the tablet,
mobile phone, new printers and smart gadgets. The instructions on disc are in
English, but not in a language easy to understand unless you have a grasp of
symbols. Our kids get round this through education from primary schools
onwards, then spending hours in the bedroom free to roam around cyberspace. I
visited a friend’s new house and remarked how impressed I was at the ample open
space for the kids to play on.
Cherry Cherokee |
Fig Brown Turkey |
Fruit crops are going through the same changes, so now we
have raspberries and strawberries fruiting from early summer till autumn,
apples suited to the very small gardens and now everyone is having a go at the
unusual and exotic crops. Nurseries, plant breeders and scientists are all out
to improve plant performance and extend the range of plants available. Our
gardens and allotments can be a great source of pleasure as we amaze our fellow
gardeners with new, unusual and sometimes exotic fruit plants.
Fig Brown Turkey is
quite successful in Scotland outdoors if given the shelter and warmth of a
south facing wall and grown in a pit to restrict root growth and encourage
fruiting.
Peaches are also
successful up north outdoors with the same south facing fence or wall, but because
of the peach leaf curl disease use the variety Avalon Pride which gets some
disease but not enough to curtail growth and fruiting.
Grape Brant growing outdoors |
Cherries are also
possible outdoors with varieties like Cherokee especially if grown on the
dwarfing rootstock Gisella 5. This keeps the height down to about six feet so
nets can be used to keep birds off the fruits.
Saskatoons are
easy to grow and are quite similar to blueberries but fruit a few weeks
earlier. They produce a far heavier crop than blueberries and also need
protection from birds.
Grapes grown
outdoors in Scotland are a new venture. At present there are many hardy varieties
to choose from. I am having success with Brant, Phoenix and Rondo with Solaris
showing promise and Seigerrebe which crops early could be another to watch. It
is a very heavy cropper, but grapes are small, though very sweet so can be a
problem with wasps.
Strawberries can
now fruit for 6 months from mid May by selecting a range of varieties and
giving a row of earlies some polythene tunnel protection.
Raspberries can
fruit from summer to autumn with a few varieties including Polka and Autumn
Treasure for the late crops. Glen Fyne is brilliant in summer with the newer
Glen Dee just planted.
Scottish Heritage apple Pearl |
Apple and pear trees
now come in many different forms to suit both large and very small gardens. Fans,
cordons and espaliers were normal for walls but now we have narrow columnar
shapes and low stepover plants. Where space is restricted you can buy a family
tree with several varieties grown on one tree, or you can graft new varieties,
(try Pearl a heritage type) onto your own tree as it is not too difficult. I
will show this technique in a March feature for grafting in early spring.
Wee jobs to do this week
Sharpen up the garden shears |
If frost or snow
prevent outdoor activities take the chance of going through the gardening tools
to make sure you are ready for the year ahead. Repair or replace broken or worn
out spades, rakes, hoes, shears, garden lines, brushes or hoses that leak. Take
a file and sharpen shears and hoes.
As I will be doing
some grafting in March my knife will get sharpened with a carborundum stone.
END