TOP FRUIT REVIEW
The last of the apples
have now been picked as we approach the end of October, so while crops are
fresh in our minds it is good to review the past year to see if we need to make
any changes for 2017.
On the east side of
central Scotland our climate is usually drier than the west and warmer than the
north, so varieties grown should reflect this. By and large it has been a
brilliant year for fruit, with good pollination in spring, followed by strong
healthy growth. This gave a great fruit set that needed a lot of thinning to
leave us with a heavy crop of large fruits.
John picks some Discovery apples |
Summer was warm and dry
but Scotland never seemed to catch those heat waves that troubled the south of
the country, then in autumn we got a few gales that brought down a lot of early
apples.
The Oslin, also known
as the
Arbroath Pippin is my first apple to crop, ripening in August, but it
flowers very early so fruit set was not good, then a damp spell in mid summer
caused a fair bit of brown rot. My second early apple Discovery made up for the
poor crop of Oslins. Size was brilliant and they kept us in apples throughout
September and October. Red Devil follows on in mid October with Fiesta getting
picked at the end of October. This year Fiesta apples are huge and ripened up
just perfect, but Red Falstaff looks like it will hang on the tree till early
November.
The Oslin |
My James Grieve apple
tree had been grafted with several other Scottish Heritage varieties a few
years back and these have now come into cropping, so this year I will be sampling
some Lord Rosebery, Park Farm Pippin and Pearl. They were picked in mid October
and now in store to ripen up for a couple of weeks before tasting.
Scottish heritage apple Pearl |
My cooking apple
Bramley surpassed its self with the heaviest crop ever.
It was the pear tree
that was this year’s disappointment. I have a large tree grafted with
Conference, Comice, Beurre Hardy and the Christie, but although it was covered
in blossom in spring I only got four pears. Harvesting was not a huge
operation. I am planning to reduce some growth in winter and graft another
couple of pears such as Beth and Concorde onto them next April.
Other pear trees at
City Road allotments have fared a lot better with good crops of large pears.
Plums were in short
supply as this is my first year after planting a young Victoria plum tree to
replace my mature plum infected by silver leaf disease. It flowered in spring
so I allowed one plum to mature just so I could still get a wee taste of plums,
but hope to get more in 2017.
Peach Avalon Pride
planted last winter has put on good growth. This variety is said to be
resistant to peach leaf curl which kept devastating my other peach Peregrine
and had to be removed. Peregrine in a good year would give me good crops, but
climate change was just not in its favour.
Avalon Pride did get
some peach leaf curl disease but not enough to affect growth, so I look forward
to seeing some Scottish outdoor grown peaches next year.
Cherry Cherokee was
another winner as it just loved our spring and summer. The tree is grown on the
dwarfing rootstock Gisela 5 so it is easy to keep height down to a manageable
size for picking.
This was a very busy
year so I never got round to netting my tree, but still I lost very few
cherries to the blackbirds. Blackfly infestations on the young shoots was a
problem, but some summer pruning of young shoots reduces the problem and helps
keep the tree small.
Scottish Heritage apple Lord Rosebery |
Figs also had another
great year, cropping from mid August to mid October giving me over 140 ripe
figs.
Wee jobs to do this week
The tomato crops are
now finished, so after the last ripe ones have been harvested and the green
ones also picked to be left somewhere to ripen up, the old plants can be
removed. However as we are in a cold greenhouse there is still enough warmth to
grow a crop of winter lettuce, some rocket leaves and some winter hardy spring
onions. Once all the old plants have been cleared up fork over the soil
lightly, firm it and rake it level. Add some fertiliser and plant young salads
sown in trays a few weeks ago. These should keep us supplied with salads for
the next few months.
END
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