Showing posts with label apricots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apricots. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 October 2015

Planting out an apricot seedling

Following internet instructions, which are sketchy at the best of times, I dug under the old existing apricot tree and found three apricot seeds.  I cracked them open, and only the one pictured below was intact and almond looking.

Apricot Seed, Unknown - 01 - 2014-01-16 - Seed From Existing Tree
Apricot kernel

I put this in a container and left it out exposed to the weather, watering sporadically.

Apricot Seed, Unknown - 01 - 2014-01-23 - Seed From Existing Tree
Apricot seedling

A year and a half later, I found the larger container it'd been transplanted into, extremely dry but the seedling looked alive.  So I planted it out in the windbreak, it's hard to see in the picture below, but it's center right beside the clump of grass and wiry.

2015-10-18 - 04
Apricot seedling planted out

Monday, 19 October 2015

Orchard apricot trees in Spring 2015

I've planted three apricot trees in the orchard, a Royal Rosa, a Moorpark and a Cluthagold.

The Royal Rosal flowered first, at the same time as the older apricot tree.  Unfortunately, while I covered it along with the later flowering trees with frost cloth, a heavy frost occurred on a night when no-one was here to cover it and none of the flowers survived.  Last year one apricot ripened on this tree.

2015-10-17 - Royal rosa
Royal Rosa apricot tree
The Moorpark is the next oldest orchard planting.  Flowering later than the Royal Rosa the nightly coverings of frost cloth started in time, and it has the most young green apricots on it.

2015-10-17 - Moorpark apricot tree
Moorpark apricot tree
Lastly, is the Cluthagold tree which was planted within the last year.  It also has a decent number of young green apricots on it, considering.

2015-10-17 - Cluthagold apricot tree
Cluthagold apricot tree
All the grass has been cleared from around the apricot trees and a layer of mulch put down.  People say (like robots) that the reason for any problem is the grass is not having been cleared from around the trees, but lets look at the facts.

  1. If the grass is cleared from around the trees, the lack of rain dries out the soil and cracks the ground.
  2. When the long grass is cleared from around the trees, the trunk is often wet despite lack of watering or rain.  Likely from the dew.
To me, the belief that the grass is bad seems to be a religious one.  I think it does more help than harm.  I'd put a photo of some of the cracked ground here, but it just rained this morning for the first time in ages and it won't look as convincing as it would if I had taken a picture yesterday or a day from now.

Saturday, 17 October 2015

The old apricot tree in Spring 2015

At time of purchase, this property had one old diseased apricot tree, a walnut tree and a black boy peach.

This tree below is an unknown variety of apricot, and to the left of it out of frame is the walnut tree.  The walnut tree has fruited well every year, and in the cupboard I've both jars of walnut in form suitable for cake decoration and also pickled in malt vinegar.  The apricot however, was rather lacklustre and provided about five albeit tasty fruit last year.  In the photo below it can be see seen flowering, it flowered early and suffered little effect from the weeks of frosts which followed.

Old apricot tree at start of spring

The next picture is three weeks on, and while it's hard to make them out, it is covered in young green apricots.

Old apricot tree first fruit photo

Here's the tree four weeks on, note that behind it to the right is a sycamore tree.  This is the only real place I've seen bees this Spring and even then only yesterday.  Seriously.  I've been out in the paddock daily looking around, and while there might be the odd bumblebee, mostly it's flies that seem to be pollinating the flowers.

Old apricot tree second fruit photo 3

This is a close up of the tree at four weeks on.

Old apricot tree second fruit photo 2

And another.

Old apricot tree second fruit photo 1

This year is looking good for apricots.