- Перевод песни Apple tree (Aurora)
- Apple tree
- Яблоня 1
- Apple tree only flowering on one side
- 1 Answer 1
- Growing apples in the home garden
- Quick facts
- Two trees can provide plenty of apples
- Care through the seasons
- Selecting plants
- Seedling or standard rootstock
- Dwarfing rootstock
- Common rootstock for Minnesota
- Apple varieties for home orchards and gardens
- Planting and caring for young trees
- Find a sunny location
- Spacing
- Dig a hole
- Look at the roots
- Put the tree in the hole
- How to keep your apple trees healthy and productive
- Watering
- Support
- Fertilizer and mulch
- Weeding
- Know when to pick
- How to pick an apple
- Storing apples
- Will apples be affected by a hard freeze?
Перевод песни Apple tree (Aurora)
Apple tree
Яблоня 1
All of my life,
I’ve been hunting,
I’ve been a girl,
I’ve been a boy,
digging my feet into the ground,
like an apple tree
wanting to live with a purpose.
Skin is a word,
love is not a sin.
people are bad
people are good
Just like the moon is a stone,
but it’s a star when it’s dark
and now she’s hiding
If you’ve seen what a heart is. You’ve seen its colour
If I ever knew how we could guide it
I would take care of its children, become their mother
If I ever knew how we could hide it… hide it
Let her save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save them all, he is just a boy
Let her save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save them all, he is just a boy
Hunger is quiet, if you do it right
Hunter is loud and predictable
Scaring away every prey
So they are gone
Before the hunter arrives
Would you be kind
And put away your sword
You cannot cut Away
What we got
You cannot kill what we are
We are not here in physical form
You’ve seen where the knife is
It’s dark location
if I ever knew how we could hide it
I would cut into our anger, make pure emotion
If I ever knew how we could hide it… hide it
Let her save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save them all, he is just a boy
Let save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save them all, he is just a boy
Can you carry the weight of mortality?
The explosions around you is your symphony!
Let her save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save the poor, he is just a boy
Let her save the world, she is just a girl
Let him save the poor, he is just a boy
Всю свою жизнь
Я охотилась,
Я была девочкой,
Я была мальчиком,
взрывая землю ногами
словно яблоня,
пытаясь жить с целью.
Кожа – это слово,
любовь – это не грех 2 .
Люди – это зло,
Люди – это добро,
Так же как Луна – это камень,
Но во тьме звезда,
А теперь она скрылась.
Если б ты видел, где сердце, видел его цвет,
Если б я знала, как мы можем направить его,
Я бы позаботилась о наших детях, стала им матерью,
Если б я знала, как можно скрыть это, скрыть это.
Позвольте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Дайте ему спасти их всех, он лишь мальчик.
Дайте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Позвольте ему спасти их всех, он лишь мальчик.
Голод тих, если правильно с ним обращаться,
Охотник шумен и предсказуем,
Спугивая жертв так,
Что они исчезнут.
До прихода охотника.
Будьте добры
И уберите меч,
Вы не можете срубить,
Что у нас есть,
Вы не можете убить нас,
Мы телесно не здесь.
Ты видел, где нож,
Это мрачное место.
Если б я знала как можно его спрятать,
Я бы разрубила наш гнев, создала чистые чувства,
Если бы я знала как его спрятать. спрятать.
Дайте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Дайте ему спасти их всех, он лишь мальчик.
Позвольте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Пусть он спасёт их всех, он лишь мальчик.
Вы вынесете тяжесть смертности?
Эти взрывы повсюду — ваша симфония!
Позвольте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Позвольте ему спасти бедных, он лишь мальчик.
Дайте ей спасти мир, она лишь девочка,
Дайте ему спасти бедных, он лишь мальчик.
1) в Христианской мифологии Яблоня – Дерево Познания Добра и Зла. Здесь выбор именно яблони также символичен, Аврора поёт о спасении мира и людей, о добре и зле
2) skin – sin английская игра слов
В описании клипа Аврора написала:
« «Apple Tree» – песня о потенциале, скрытом в нас. Мы все можем спасти мир, если направим на это свои мысли. Мир не послушает научных доказательств того, что он умирает, но возможно он услышит мечтателей, детей. В кровоточащем мире сила личности – наша единственная надежда. Позвольте ей спасти мир. Позвольте ему спасти их всех. Верьте в нас, и возможно мы станем поколением, спасшим мир, а не убившим его».
(Оригинал цитаты: «Apple Tree is about the potential that hides in all of us. We can all save the world if we put our minds to it. The world won’t listen to scientific proof that the world is dying, so maybe it will listen to the dreamers, the children. In a bleeding world the power of the individual is our only hope. Let her save the world. Let him save them all. Believe in us, and maybe we’ll be the generation that saves the world, rather than the one that killed it»)
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Apple tree only flowering on one side
I have a peculiar problem with an apple tree in my backyard. As you might be able to tell from the picture below, it’s only flowering on one side. That’s not too weird if it weren’t for the fact that last year it did the same, but on the exact opposite side. And all the years before that it just bloomed normally. The flowers aren’t also just distributed on specific branches. Both times the flowers seem to choose branches at random as long it’s on the side of the tree that blooms. If that branch goes to the other side it simply doesn’t bear any flowers over there.
My father, who planted the tree, says it’s around 20 years old and that it’s of the ‘golden’ species. We didn’t do anything special to the tree nor did we do any building work, soil management or other alteration to the surroundings in the last two years.
Would anyone be able to shed light on this? While I have searched, but I haven’t found any information that can clarify this so far.
1 Answer 1
This could be a strange version of «biennial bearing» which is a well known fruit tree problem.
It can be started by something happening which reduces one year’s crop. This results in over-production of flowers the following year which over-stresses the tree, resulting in no crop the following year, and the two-year cycle continues.
Maybe one half of the tree was damaged by bad weather somehow and the two «halves» are now on opposite two-year cycles. From the picture, you almost have two independent trees joined at the trunk, not a single trunk with several side branches.
If that is the case, one cure for it is to remove about half the flower buds to reduce the crop, and try to get the tree back into producing every year. Try to make sure the tree has adequate water and nutrients to support producing a crop as well.
Note, thinning the fruit after it has «set» is a much less effective cure than removing the flower buds before pollination, because the pollination process produces hormones which affect the tree’s behaviour for the following year.
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Growing apples in the home garden
Quick facts
- Apple trees need at least 8 hours of sun per day during the growing season.
- Two varieties are required for successful pollination; one can be a crabapple.
- Dwarf apple trees will start bearing fruit 2 to 3 years after planting.
- Standard size trees can take up to 8 years to bear fruit.
- Some varieties are more susceptible to insect and disease damage than others.
- Prune annually to keep apple trees healthy and productive.
Two trees can provide plenty of apples
Apples are pollinated by insects, with bees and flies transferring pollen from flowers of one apple tree to those of another. But you don’t need to plant a whole orchard to enjoy apples right off the tree. Two trees will reward any family with enough fruit to enjoy and share with friends.
Apples require pollen from a different apple variety to grow fruit. If you only have room in your yard for one tree, there may be crab apples in your neighborhood to provide the pollen your tree needs.
Most apple trees are grafted onto dwarfing rootstocks and only grow to be about 8-10 feet tall. So even if you’re short on space, you probably have space for two trees.
Care through the seasons
March—For existing trees, prune before growth begins, after coldest weather has passed
- remove smallest apples to encourage larger fruit
- taste fruit when it appears to be fully colored
- if it’s too starchy, wait a few days
Selecting plants
Before choosing an apple tree to plant, take a look around your neighborhood. A pollen source should be within 100 feet of the apple tree you plant to ensure the pollen gets to your tree.
If you don’t see any crabapples or other apple trees that close, your best bet is to plant two trees of different varieties.
When purchasing an apple tree, you are actually selecting a plant made up of two genetically different individuals grafted together, the scion and the rootstock.
- The scion is the aboveground part of the tree that produces the type of fruit desired (ex. Honeycrisp or Haralson).
- The rootstock plays a major role in determining the tree’s ultimate size and how long it will take to bear fruit.
Variety tables provide hardiness, size and compatibility information for apple varieties that have proven to do well in northern climates.
Choosing a rootstock
If you have limited space, pay particular attention to the rootstock you choose for your apple trees.
Often nurseries will label the trees dwarfing, semi-dwarfing, and standard. These labels are referring to the rootstock, which determines how tall your tree will grow.
If you have an interest in a specific rootstock, talk with your local nursery. They might be able to order a tree for you.
Otherwise, you might want to order trees from a nursery that grafts each fruit variety on various rootstocks to get the combination you desire.
- Seedling or standard rootstocks may cause the tree to grow 20 or more feet tall.
- Dwarfing rootstocks reduce tree size by up to 50 percent, so that a tree may be only 8, 12, or 15 feet tall when mature, depending upon its rootstock, scion variety, and growing conditions.
- Whether the fruiting variety is grafted onto standard or dwarfing rootstock, the fruit size and quality will be the same.
Seedling or standard rootstock
- Grow to 20 or more feet tall
- Produce up to 10 bushels of fruit per tree
Pluses
- More tolerant of wetter and drier soils
- Better anchored than dwarf trees
Minuses
- May need 8 or more years to start bearing fruit
- More complicated pruning, thinning, harvesting
- More difficult to control pests
Dwarfing rootstock
- Grow to 8, 12, or 15 feet tall (40-80% shorter than standard)
- Produce 2 to 3 bushels of fruit per tree
Pluses
- Simpler pruning, thinning, harvesting
- Easier to control pests
- Require only 3-4 years to start bearing fruit
- Can fit 2 or 3 trees into a small space
Minuses
- Can fall over more easily and may need to be anchored
- May be more prone to some diseases
Common rootstock for Minnesota
Seedling
A seedling rootstock is actually grown from the seed of an apple, often McIntosh or another common, hardy variety. Although you won’t know exactly what you’re getting with a seedling rootstock—every single seed is a genetically different individual —hardiness, anchorage and adaptability to different soil types are generally excellent.
MM.111
This rootstock, sometimes termed ‘semi-dwarfing,’ other times ‘semi-standard,’ produces a tree about 80% of the height of a standard tree. In many areas of Minnesota, this can work out to roughly a 14-18 foot tree.
MM.111 is a hardy, well-anchored rootstock that can withstand drier soil conditions, making it an excellent choice especially for western parts of the state.
M.9 (also: EMLA 9 – virus-free)
This rootstock performs well under many conditions and produces a tree 40-50% the height of a standard tree. It produces fruit very early in the life of the tree.
M.9 has poor anchorage due to brittle roots and a high fruit to wood ratio which means it requires staking for the life of the tree. M.9 is very susceptible to fire blight. It produces moderate amounts of root suckers and burr knots.
M.26 (also: EMLA 26 – virus-free)
This dwarfing rootstock produces a tree 8-10 feet in height. Trees planted on M.26 generally require staking for the first few years of growth or, on windy sites, for the life of the tree.
M.26 is reliably hardy, but is especially susceptible to fire blight. Fruit is produced very early in the tree’s life, sometimes within three years from planting.
Apple varieties recommended for Minnesota
Apple varieties for home orchards and gardens
Variety | Hardiness (zone 4 to zone 3) | Avg harvest | Best use | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chestnut (1949) | Excellent to very good | Early-mid Sept. | Fresh eating, sauce | Large crab apple, russet skin. Rich, intense, nutty flavor. Fruit stores for 4 to 5 weeks. Moderately resistant to apple scab and fireblight. |
Cortland | Good to fair | Late Sept.-early Oct. | Fresh eating, cooking, salad | Medium size. Sweet to tart. Slow to turn brown when cut. Susceptible to apple scab and fireblight. |
Freedom | Good to fair | Sept. | Fresh eating, cooking | Crisp, juicy, sweet. Immune to apple scab, moderately resistant to fireblight. |
Frostbite™ (2008) | Excellent to very good | Late Sept.-mid Oct. | Fresh eating, cider | Small. Intensely sweet, firm and juicy. Extremely cold hardy. Stores 3-4 months. Good for areas too cold to grow anything else. Some resistance to apple scab and fireblight. |
Haralson (1922) | Very good to good | Late Sept.-early Oct. | Fresh eating, cooking. Great for pie. | Medium size, striped red. Great for pie. Stores 4-5 months. Some resistance to apple scab and fireblight. |
Honeycrisp (1991) | Very good to good | Late Sept. | Best for fresh eating. Good for cooking. | Medium-large. Extremely juicy and crisp. Slow to turn brown when cut. Stores well for 7+ months. Some resistance to apple scab and fireblight. |
Honeygold (1970) | Good to fair | Early Oct. | Excellent for fresh eating. Good for cooking. | Medium size, golden to yellow-green. Crisp, juicy, sweet. Stores 2-3 months. Susceptible to apple scab and fireblight. |
Liberty | Good to fair | Early Oct. | Fresh eating, cooking | Medium size. Well-balanced flavor similar to McIntosh, but firmer. Immune to apple scab and resistant to fireblight. |
Regent (1964) | Good to fair | Early-mid Oct. | Fresh eating, cooking | Red striped. Crisp and juicy, well-balanced flavor. Stores 4-5 months. Susceptible to apple scab and fireblight. |
SnowSweet® (2006) | Good to fair | Mid Oct. | Fresh eating, cooking, salad | Large, bronze-red, blush fruit. Low-acid, sweet flavor. Slow to brown when cut. Stores up to 2 months. Moderately susceptible to apple scab and fireblight. |
Sweet Sixteen (1977) | Very good to good | Mid-late Sept. | Fresh eating | Medium to large, stripes and solid wash of rosy red. Crisp, juicy, very sweet, spicy, cherry candy flavor. Stores 5-8 weeks. Some resistance to apple scab and fireblight. |
Triumph (2021) | Very good in Zone 4, not recommended for Zone 3 | Late September | Best for fresh eating. Good for cooking. | Attractive fruit with pleasantly tart and well-balanced flavor and good storage life. Excellent tolerance to apple scab. |
Wealthy | Good to fair | Early Sept. | Fresh eating, cooking | Medium size, slightly acidic. Resistant to apple scab and fireblight. Doesn’t store as long as others. |
William’s Pride | Good to fair | Mid Aug. | Fresh eating, cooking | Medium size, slightly acidic. Resistant to apple scab and fireblight. Doesn’t store as long as others. |
Zestar!® (1999) | Good to fair | Late Aug.-early Sept. | Fresh eating, cooking | Large, crunchy, juicy red fruit. Balanced sweet-tart flavor. Stores 6-8 weeks. Susceptible to apple scab. Some resistance to fireblight. |
University of Minnesota varieties are in bold and include their release date.
Planting and caring for young trees
Learn how to choose a location, prepare for planting and space trees.
Preparing for planting
Find a sunny location
Apple trees require full sun, so choose a spot where the sun shines directly on the tree for at least 8 hours each day.
Test your soil
When it comes to soil, apple trees can grow in most soils as long as there is no standing water and the pH of the soil is between 6 and 7.
- Have your soil tested to determine pH
- pH of the soil should be between 6 and 7
- Apple trees can grow in most soils as long as there is no standing water
- Avoid planting in areas where water stands for several hours after a rain
If you are unsure about your soil pH, conduct a soil test to determine soil conditions before planting and amend the soil as suggested by the results.
Spacing
How much space do you need for apple trees? A good rule of thumb for a garden fruit tree is to provide at least as much horizontal space as the anticipated height of the tree. So, if your tree will grow up to 8 feet high, make sure there are 8 feet between it and the next tree.
Planting trees too close together will increase shading and reduce the number and quality of the fruit coming from your tree.
Tree spacing
- Standard trees: 20-25 feet
- Semi-dwarf trees: 12-15 feet
- Dwarf trees: 6-8 feet
Dig a hole
- Dig a hole for each tree that is no deeper than the root ball, and about twice as wide.
- When you dig the soil out of the hole, pile it on a tarp or piece of plywood so it’s easier to get it back in the hole.
- You may mix in up to one-third by volume compost, peat moss or other organic matter.
- Most of what goes back in the planting hole should be the soil you took out of the hole.
- There is no need to add fertilizer to the hole.
Look at the roots
- If you purchased bare root trees, closely examine the root system and remove encircling roots or J-shaped roots that could eventually strangle the trunk.
- For trees in containers, inspect the root systems for encircling woody roots.
- If woody roots are wrapped around in a circle, straighten them or make several cuts through the root ball prior to planting.
- This helps the plant produce a stronger root system and prevents the formation of girdling roots that eventually weaken the tree.
Put the tree in the hole
- Position each tree so that the graft union is about 4 inches above the soil line. The graft union is a swelling where the variety meets the rootstock.
- If the graft union is placed close to or below the soil line, the variety (scion) will root, causing trees to grow to full size.
- Spread the roots of bare root trees, making sure none are bent.
- Have someone help you get the tree standing up straight.
- Begin adding the soil, tamping to remove air pockets as you go.
- After the hole is filled, tamp gently and water thoroughly to remove remaining air pockets.
- The soil may settle an inch or two. If this happens, add more soil.
Planting apple trees video
Video courtesy of Jon Clements, University of Massachusetts (00:3:47)
How to keep your apple trees healthy and productive
From watering to weeding to thinning fruit, caring for your apple trees throughout the year will help your plants produce plenty of apples to harvest.
Watering, weeding, fertilizing and staking trees
Watering
Throughout the life of the tree, you should water its root zone thoroughly during the growing season whenever there is a dry spell. Ideally, the tree should receive one inch of water from rainfall or irrigation every week from May through October.
Support
It’s a good idea to stake the tree for the first few years. Either a wooden or metal stake will work. A stake should be about the height of the tree after being pounded two feet into the ground. Use a wide piece non-abrasive material to fasten the tree to the stake. Avoid narrow fastenings such as wire or twine, as they may cut into the bark.
Use tree guards to protect the trunk of your tree
Planting is a good time to install a tree guard. These are usually made of plastic and are available at most nurseries and online.
Tree guards protect your tree from winter injury and bark chewing by small mammals, such as voles (aka meadow mice) and rabbits.
Guards also reflect sunlight from the trunk, which helps prevent the trunk from heating up on a cold, sunny winter day.
- If the bark temperature gets above freezing, water in the conductive tissue under the bark becomes liquid and begins to flow through the cells.
- When the sun goes down or behind a cloud, the liquid water suddenly freezes, damaging the cells and sometimes killing all the tissue on one side of the trunk. This is called sunscald.
Once the tree has rough and flaky mature bark, neither winter sun nor chewing animals can harm it, so tree guards will not be necessary. For the first years of its life, however, it’s important to protect the trunk of your fruit tree.
Fertilizer and mulch
Once established, an apple tree planted on a favorable site, in properly prepared soil, should thrive with minimal fertilization.
- Nitrogen is normally the only mineral nutrient that needs to be added on an annual basis and can be added using compost.
- The branches of non-bearing young apple trees will normally grow 12 to 18 inches per year while the branches of bearing apple trees will grow 8 to 12 inches in a season.
- If growth exceeds these rates, apply no compost at all, as too much growth can keep fruit from developing, and lush growth is more susceptible to fireblight infection.
Weeding
- For the first three to five years, grass and weeds should be removed from about a 3-foot radius around the tree.
- Grasses can deplete soil moisture rapidly and will reduce tree growth.
- Applying a few inches of mulch around the base of the tree will help prevent weeds.
- Keep the mulch a few inches away from the trunk to prevent rodent damage and fungal growth.
An apple tree will provide an abundant crop if conditions are favorable when the tree is in bloom.
Some of the fruit will naturally drop off the tree in mid June, but the tree may be left with more fruit than it can support.
Too heavy crops can cause biennial bearing, when a heavy crop of small, green apples is followed by little or no crop the next year.
- Thinning fruit off the trees by hand will minimize biennial bearing and promote larger, higher quality fruit.
- Leave one or two fruit per flower cluster or, for the best fruit quality, about 4 to 6 inches between fruit on any branch.
- Thin when fruit is about marble size, in late June or early July, after some of the fruit has already dropped naturally.
- Thinning improves the quality of the apples you’ll harvest in the fall.
- You’ll be more likely to get fruit every year.
Harvesting and storing fruit
Know when to pick
The color of an apple is only one indicator of its ripeness. Sweetness is an indicator of maturity and harvest-readiness along with fruit size and color. There is a popular idea that some later apple varieties need a frost to sweeten them before picking. However, apples will ripen and sweeten up without a frost.
How to tell if an apple is ripe
- Look for a change in the background color, the part of the skin not covered with red color.
- When the background color (also called ground color) begins to change from green to a greenish yellow color, the apple is starting to ripen.
- Other than Honeygold, all other apples we recommend should have a green-turning-to-yellow background color when fully ripened.
- Pick a few apples that seem ripe and taste them to be sure they are at the ripeness you prefer.
- As apples ripen, starch in the flesh is converted to sugar. An unripe apple will be starchy and leave a sticky film on your teeth.
- A ripe apple may still be tart, but it should have developed aromatic flavors.
- You may need to pick the fruit from the same tree several times over the course of a week or two in order to get all the fruit at the right stage of maturity.
- Check the UMN Minnesota Hardy website to see what time in the season your apple variety typically ripens.
How to pick an apple
- Gently take the fruit in the palm of your hand, then lift and twist in a single motion.
- Or use one hand to hold the short, thick fruiting spur that bore the apple, and the other hand to lift and twist the fruit.
- Avoid pulling or yanking the fruit as you could pull off the spur, taking with it next year’s flower buds.
Storing apples
Apples last the longest at standard refrigerator temperatures, about 33°F to 38°F, with about 85 percent humidity. Although garages, basements and root cellars may provide adequate storage conditions, the best place to store apples at home is usually the refrigerator.
- Warmer temperatures always shorten the storage life of apples.
- Apples stored near 33°F may last as much as 10 times longer than apples stored at room temperature.
- High humidity helps reduce the shriveling of apples in storage.
- If the storage environment is low in humidity, as most refrigerators are, the fruit should be stored in a perforated plastic bag or a loosely covered container.
- Although apples are lovely displayed in a fruit bowl, such conditions will dramatically reduce their usable life.
Will apples be affected by a hard freeze?
A «hard freeze» is defined as four straight hours of 28°F. While 32°F is the freezing temperature for water, it is not the freezing temperature for most fruits. Fruits such as apples, grapes, and strawberries are high in sugar. The sugar in the fruit’s juice reduces the temperature at which the fruit freezes.
- Apple fruit starts freezing at around 28-28.5°F, but apples should be okay provided the temperature doesn’t fall much below 28.
- The longer apples are exposed to temperatures below 28 degrees, the higher the chance that they will get damaged.
- Frozen apples should not be picked until the fruit thaws out, as the frozen fruit will bruise and be unusable.
- After a freeze, leave the apples on the tree and wait until midday when they have thawed out.
- Late fruiting apples like U of M’s SnowSweet® and Haralson are more at risk of freezing because they are more likely to still be on the trees when a freeze hits.
A brief dip below 28 degrees may just weaken the apples enough to decrease their shelf life. Several nights below 28 degrees are more likely to soften the skin and flesh of the apple, making the fruit unusable.
At 22°F, the fruit will freeze hard and cells will break down, making the fruit soft. If only a brief freeze happens and the fruit is still firm, use the fruit soon, as it may not store well.
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