We had a fantastic afternoon at Dorich House with the volunteers on Wednesday.
Working on a sunny afternoon |
Telling volunteers about why Orchards are important |
Explaining how to identify growth points from year to year |
The difference between fruit and leaf buds |
The fruit from any cultivated fruit tree will not produce the same variety on which it grew (known as not breeding true from seed). To guarantee that the tree you are growing will produce a certain variety fruit requires cloning.
This isn’t cloning in the way we might imagine as portrayed in current media, in a lab; but by taking cuttings from the desired variety and then then grafting (joining) it onto rootstock.
A practice which has existed for hundreds of years – in modern times, a range of rootstocks can be used to grow the same variety. With different traits such as the size of the grown tree, fruit size and even resistance to different pests being associated with the different rootstocks.
Claire works to delicately prune cut off branches in the apple tree which are within easy reach |
The volunteers split up into teams of three, each team working on one of the large apple trees in the Orchard.
Rianna and her team worked on the leaning apple tree, with the long handled pruning saw, on a branch just out of reach of the ladder. |
Sanna and Aaliyah clearing up the 20% cuttings from our other apple tree |
2016 – A rest year for the orchard
and 2017
Some of the lichens that grow on our apple trees |
We’ve been able to get the trees fruiting better providing fruit for wildlife and people.
Can you see the differences in the before and after? |
A different way to train young trees, tying down branches and then cutting them to encourage new upward growth |
While scrumping for apples is often romanticised, its just theft, and in cases where every bit of fruit has been taken, extreme greed and theft; negatively impacting on all of the hard work that volunteers have put into the Orchard. We’re hoping that by bringing this to everyone’s attention, people will start to keep a look out and report anything they see to us so that we can report it to the authorities.
Space under our Mulberry tree, you can see the lovely growth pattern of the tree trunk |
This year we removed any regrowth of the ivy and scrub under the tree as well as doing our very first cut to the mulberry. Unlike the normal 20% rule, where pruning is limited to 20% of the growth in any one year, we did very little pruning.
This is because the tree is very old, with large areas which contain dead wood. Heavy pruning might have resulted in the tree putting out lots of new growth in an unanticipated way, potentially putting more energy into new shoots at points where the tree might not be able to support it. So we are going with the very slow and steady route.
Some of the cut mulberry, will be used as a art installation at Court Farm Garden Centre, Old Kingston Road, KT4 7QH, for the Tolworth Treasure and the Hogsmill Hum event* |
Join us next year and help us continue to improve our orchard. |
Until next time.
*https://www.facebook.com/tolworthtreasure/ for the details of the event on the 25th of Feb which is free for all to attend.
** Information on milk sap from mulberries found in Minamizawa,K. 1984. Science of Mulberry Cultivation - fundamentals and practice. Meiho-sha, Japan Science Press. Translated from Japanese in 1997. translation reviewed by Hirano, H. and Kurioka, A. Extract available online at https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AAnCBz05YIEC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
** Information on milk sap from mulberries found in Minamizawa,K. 1984. Science of Mulberry Cultivation - fundamentals and practice. Meiho-sha, Japan Science Press. Translated from Japanese in 1997. translation reviewed by Hirano, H. and Kurioka, A. Extract available online at https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=AAnCBz05YIEC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
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