Caring Properly for your Fruit Tree
During the first stages of the tree’s life, the roots, trunk, and
branches have not yet fully developed to a self supporting strength.
Therefore if your tree is growing fruits, occasionally the combined
weight is enough to snap off an entire branch. If this is the case, you
should provide external support for your branches – prop them up with
boards, or tie them to something at a higher altitude. As long as you
can provide your tree the support it needs in these early years, it
should grow to be independent in no time at all.
Proper nutrition is not
only necessary for the production of healthy fruits, but is also
necessary for the tree to survive longer than one season. The exact
specifications vary with the area, climate, and type of tree, but I’ve
found that there is no better source than a nursery employee. Maybe they’re just eager to sell you the right type of fertilizer,
but in my experience they are almost never wrong. Just inform them
about the conditions your tree is living in and how healthy it is
looking, and they should be able to help you find something to improve
the state of your tree.
Lots of people think that the only way to ensure
a tree’s healthiness is to provide it insane amounts of water. This is
not the case at all. As a matter of fact, giving too much water to a
tree can be more harmful than making it go thirsty. At the best it will
have a negative effect on the taste of the fruit. But at worst, your
entire tree could die and prevent you from ever growing fruit in the
future. So do not ever try to solve your problems by giving it lots of
water! Solve your tree’s health problems at the root, so to speak. Go
to where the problem originates from, and fix that.
If it is too late
and you’re already starting to see unhealthy branches that look either
diseased or damaged, you should always remove them. If the tree is
wasting nutrients by sending them out to the branch that cannot be
saved, it is practically throwing away all the nutrients that it could
use on the other, healthier branches. As soon as you start to see a
branch that is deteriorating or becoming unhealthy, chop it off right
away. At the very least, trim down the unhealthy part but leave all the
segments that still look like they could continue growing.
Once your
tree has started to enter the picking stage, never leave any of the
fruit on the ground that is bound to fall. Also, be careful to get
every piece off of the tree. Even if it is an ugly looking fruit that
you don’t want to keep, you should still pick it and throw it away.
Once these fruits begin to rot, they provide a perfect home for
unwanted insects or diseases that can transfer to the tree itself. So
always remember to rake up these fallen fruits, and prevent yourself a
lot of future grief.
Getting a fruit tree and caring for it throughout
its life can be a daunting task. It may even seem impossible sometimes
to keep track of all the factors that make a tree healthy. But if you
just pay attention to the nutrients that your tree needs, you should be
on a good path. In addition to nutrients, figure out the precise amount
of watering that you should be doing to keep your tree’s thirst
quenched without drowning it. Just do all these things
, and you will have a great tree that produces delicious fruits.