This season has been my worst ever. The long cold winter - the worst that I can remember in this area - combined with lots of snow and freeze-thaw cycles seemed to cause serious damage (and eventually death) to many of my fruit trees - mostly damaging them at ground level, where snow and ice would have thawed, wetted and re-frozen repeatedly.
The casualties, so far, amount to a large portion of my young-ish trees being grown as half-standards or standards:
Apples:
Annie Elizabeth, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Ard Cairn Russet, M25 (rootstock canker)
Belle de Boskoop, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Brownlees Russet, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Jupiter, M25 (rootstock canker)
Norfolk Beefing, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
D'Arcy Spice, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Jumbo, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Suntan, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Discovery, MM111 (canker entered grafting scar)
........................
Pears:
Catillac (x2), Pyrus (canker entered grafting scar)
Concorde, Pyrus (canker entered grafting scar)
Conference, Pyrus (canker throughout the tree)
Hessle, Pyrus (rootstock canker, possibly crown rot)
........................
Now that is a bad year.
The surviving half-standards/standards, so far:
(which, knowing that my soil is difficult, I had been growing/keeping some of them in reserve, as a backup to such a disaster):
Bountiful, MM111
Court Pendu Plat, MM111
Court Pendu Plat, M25
Crawley Beauty, M25
D'Arcy Spice MM111 (x2)
D'Arcy Spice, M25
Discovery, MM111
Edward VII, M25
Egremont Russet, MM111
Howgate Wonder, M25
James Grieve, MM111
Spartan, M25
Tydeman's Late Orange, MM111
Worcester Pearmain, M25
No half-standard or standard pears survived.
.......................
Looking at the survivors of last winter's deep freeze, I note several things:
1.
MM111 rootstock (and my M9 or M26 cordons) tolerated the frosty/snowy/icy/freeze-thaw winter much better than M25 or MM106 rootstocks.
2.
I have previously observed that MM106 and M25 retain their leaves later in the autumn than the same variety on other rootstocks. Presumably, this means that a mild autumn that suddenly goes into a harsh winter (as last year) can mean that the trees aren't fully dormant.
3.
Only a few of the early-mid-flowering varieties on M25 survived.
4.
All of the very-late-flowering varieties on M25 survived.
5.
It may be that the later-flowering varieties on M25 helped protect the rootstock from the harsh winter conditions as a result of their longer and deeper winter dormancy.
6.
No pears on Pyrus rootstock survived, but my three Quince-A-rooted pear minarettes were unaffected.
The casualties, so far, amount to a large portion of my young-ish trees being grown as half-standards or standards:
Apples:
Annie Elizabeth, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Ard Cairn Russet, M25 (rootstock canker)
Belle de Boskoop, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Brownlees Russet, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
Jupiter, M25 (rootstock canker)
Norfolk Beefing, M25 (rootstock crown rot)
D'Arcy Spice, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Jumbo, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Suntan, MM106 (rootstock canker)
Discovery, MM111 (canker entered grafting scar)
........................
Pears:
Catillac (x2), Pyrus (canker entered grafting scar)
Concorde, Pyrus (canker entered grafting scar)
Conference, Pyrus (canker throughout the tree)
Hessle, Pyrus (rootstock canker, possibly crown rot)
........................
Now that is a bad year.
The surviving half-standards/standards, so far:
(which, knowing that my soil is difficult, I had been growing/keeping some of them in reserve, as a backup to such a disaster):
Bountiful, MM111
Court Pendu Plat, MM111
Court Pendu Plat, M25
Crawley Beauty, M25
D'Arcy Spice MM111 (x2)
D'Arcy Spice, M25
Discovery, MM111
Edward VII, M25
Egremont Russet, MM111
Howgate Wonder, M25
James Grieve, MM111
Spartan, M25
Tydeman's Late Orange, MM111
Worcester Pearmain, M25
No half-standard or standard pears survived.
.......................
Looking at the survivors of last winter's deep freeze, I note several things:
1.
MM111 rootstock (and my M9 or M26 cordons) tolerated the frosty/snowy/icy/freeze-thaw winter much better than M25 or MM106 rootstocks.
2.
I have previously observed that MM106 and M25 retain their leaves later in the autumn than the same variety on other rootstocks. Presumably, this means that a mild autumn that suddenly goes into a harsh winter (as last year) can mean that the trees aren't fully dormant.
3.
Only a few of the early-mid-flowering varieties on M25 survived.
4.
All of the very-late-flowering varieties on M25 survived.
5.
It may be that the later-flowering varieties on M25 helped protect the rootstock from the harsh winter conditions as a result of their longer and deeper winter dormancy.
6.
No pears on Pyrus rootstock survived, but my three Quince-A-rooted pear minarettes were unaffected.
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