GreenDragon
Well-Known Member
He looks a little.... grumpy. Like he would love to scream "Get off MY lawn"!
I have a plum tree about that size that blew over a couple of weeks ago. I still have six left so it’s chain saw time. They’re really producing this year and the pears look to be limb breakers again. The pear trees need pruning badly.Flashback to 2 JULY 2012, when that same Winesap apple tree blew down.
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It was easy to stand it back up. At that time, I drove a steel fence post (seen in todays pic in the previous post) into the ground beside it, and left it tied up for about 5 years. I think it's a goner this time.
Bob
I have a plum tree about that size that blew over a couple of weeks ago. I still have six left so it’s chain saw time. They’re really producing this year and the pears look to be limb breakers again. The pear trees need pruning badly.
They’re Bartlett pears (hard). My sister makes pear preserves with them that are mighty tasty.Are they eat'n pears (soft) or cook'n pears (hard)? My in-laws had some hard pear trees that every summer I would fill up two 5 gallon buckets of with pears. I'd take them home, peel and slice them, add sugar, spices, and tapioca, and freeze in gallon Ziploc bags. Whenever I wanted to make a pie or cobbler, I'd defrost a bag, dump and bake. Delicious and easy!
Winesap is crisp and tart. They have always been my favorite apple variety. I do find them locally grown at farmers' markets. The orchards up in Daleville, VA have them in late autumn. I have one other Winesap tree that has always been healthier than the blown down tree. Winesap is male sterile, so they require a pollinator from a different variety. I have a golden delicious that is now about 5 years old, and beginning to bear heavily, so I expect my healthy Winesap to do well this summer.cant be found in the local supermarket.
Give it a go. Never say die. Nothing ventured Nothing gained.Flashback to 2 JULY 2012, when that same Winesap apple tree blew down.
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It was easy to stand it back up. At that time, I drove a steel fence post (seen in todays pic in the previous post) into the ground beside it, and left it tied up for about 5 years. I think it's a goner this time.
Bob
Nothing ventured, no aging body part seriously injured. I will go out and stare at this toppled tree today, and make a decision about what is reasonable for me to attempt. It will never be a normal, healthy tree again. As a roughly 20-year old dwarf apple tree, it is approaching its expected end of life (~20 years). What limits the lifespan of dwarf fruit trees, compared to their full-size counterparts, is the dwarfing rootstock to which it has been grafted. This particular 20-year old specimen now grows upon a twice blown over, dwarfing rootstock.Nothing ventured Nothing gained.
One heavy branch in each hand, I dragged all the branches to a spot near a brush pile in the back. That required only 6 trips from one corner of the property to the diagonal opposite corner. I'll lop away most of the smaller branches from them, so that all that branchy mess will settle well in the brush pile. Maybe I'll do that tomorrow.I'll lasso and haul away the branches with my Oh Deere! lawn tractor.
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