I would love to claim to have come up with these ideas, but the credit lies with a progressive thinking organization named Dave Wilson nursery. Take a look at their website (www.davewilson.com) which houses a plethora of great information about planting fruit trees in your yard. The revolutionary concepts behind Backyard Orchard Culture are truly simple plant what you enjoy eating, keep trees to a manageable size, embrace successive ripening, and plant what will grow in your yard.
Planting fruits that you enjoy eating seems like a simple concept, but a little bit of research and some legwork will ensure that you don't have 25 years worth of Santa Rosa plums (which you secretly despise). Many orchards and nurseries will have fruit tasting events where they'll have available to taste different varieties of your favorite fruits. Check with your local nursery, gardening cooperative, or organic grocer for an event in your neighborhood.
The most important concept of Backyard Orchard Culture is keeping trees at a manageable size, preferably no higher than the top of your reach. What's the point of a 40 foot tree if you can only gather fruit from the bottom 10 feet of it? Regular vigilant pruning, and high density planting (multiple trees close together) will create controllable sizes of trees and maximum use of precious backyard space. Fruit trees, like most other plants can be trained to grow into almost any shape, even flat along a fence. My backyard is approximately 40 foot x 40 foot, and will contain 11 fruit trees, none more than seven feet tall (which is about as high as I can reach). Most of which are trained to grow in a flat shrub-like manner against a back fence.
Another important concept in Backyard Orchard culture is successive planting, planting trees with the same (or similar fruits) that ripen at different times of the year. I have three different types of peach trees planted an early season (fruit ripens in May), a mid season (fruit ripens in July), and a late season (fruit ripens in late August). This way instead of being inundated over a two week stretch with bushels of peaches, I've elongated the harvest season to almost four months. And since all of my trees are a manageable size, I'm not going to be overwhelmed with hundreds of peaches, but instead am going to have 40 to 50 tasty peaches from each tree at each ripening time.
The final idea is to plant what will grow in your yard. It's no use buying a wonderful Meyer Lemon tree if it will die within a month of being planted, or never be happy enough to produce fruit. Check your soil type, the number of chill hours (defined as the number of hours in late fall/early winter the temperature is below 45 degrees), and the root stock of the plant you intend to buy will work with you yard. This will ensure you of the best chance of success in your planting.
None of the concepts of Backyard Orchard Culture are ground breaking, or in any way new. Gardeners have been using them for years in one form or another. But taking them together and applying them to planting trees in your yard should give you many years of delicious, garden fresh fruit. Best of luck in your planting efforts!
Published by John P Cummings
Accounting consultant, amateur gluten free chef, lover of all things organic and local, internet scribe, and deaf dog owner. Available for writing gigs. View profile
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1 Comments
Post a CommentGreat info! I'm must admit I'm a little envious of those delicious fresh peaches in your back yard :)