Xtremehorticulture

Are Pears with Corky Spot Edible?

Q. I was reading
your blog about the brown spots in the flesh of pears. Is fruit with these spots edible?

 

Keiffer pear with outside evidence of Corky spot With the small green dimple in the center of the fruit

A. Corky spot in pears appears
as brown areas, about the size of a small marble or smaller, in the flesh of
the fruit. These spots are surrounded by healthy flesh. On the outside skin it
is hard to see but often it is slightly sunken and frequently some green
remains after the fruit ripens.
            The flesh is not rotten. The cells in the flesh do not
have enough calcium for good development and they die and are brown. These
spots do not taste good and are usually dry. But if you eat them it’s not a
problem and will not harm you.

Corky spot on the interior flesh of Keiffer pear.

            My experience with this “disease” is that it develops on pears
grown on older trees, usually over ten years of age. I theorize that the roots
of the tree have exhausted the calcium in the soil surrounding them. The soil
is full of calcium, but it cannot release it fast enough as the fruit develop.
Corky spot on Comice pear growing in the Mojave Desert
            What to do? Applications of calcium to the soil are not
100% effective. It is recommended that the fruit on the tree is sprayed with a
liquid calcium solution as the fruit is enlarging. The most effective sprays
are made with 5% calcium chloride dissolved in water. The calcium chloride
should be food grade.

5% solution of Foodgrade calcium chloride will work as a foliar spray. This foodgrade calcium chloride is for homebrewing

            These spray applications are made five times, at least a
week apart, as the fruit enlarges. Direct the sprays mostly at the fruit. Leaf
sprays are less important.
            Not all pears are affected equally. Some pears appear to handle
low soil calcium levels better than others. The problem may also vary with
different types of soils. Watch for it on older pear trees.

            By the way, this
disorder also affects some apples. When it does, it is no longer called “Corky Spot”
but “Bitter Pit” instead.

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