Q. How close for cross pollinator?? I am looking to plant
more fruit trees and was curious how close the pollinator needs to be?? My
neighbor’s have various fruit trees and I am about 1/2 mile from Gilcrease
orchard. Is this close enough to be effective or should I plant my own??
more fruit trees and was curious how close the pollinator needs to be?? My
neighbor’s have various fruit trees and I am about 1/2 mile from Gilcrease
orchard. Is this close enough to be effective or should I plant my own??
A. I know this sounds like a cop out but it should be as
close as possible. What this means is that the further away a pollenizer tree
is, the less likely it will do its job. In orchards, pollenizers are in a
neighboring row or in the same row with the trees needing pollination.
Sometimes the pollenizer is one tree in a block of 8 to 10. Line of sight is
important. If pollinators like honeybees can visit the flower needing pollenating
in a “straight shot” it is best rather than turning a corner. But ½ mile is too
far away to do any good at all.
close as possible. What this means is that the further away a pollenizer tree
is, the less likely it will do its job. In orchards, pollenizers are in a
neighboring row or in the same row with the trees needing pollination.
Sometimes the pollenizer is one tree in a block of 8 to 10. Line of sight is
important. If pollinators like honeybees can visit the flower needing pollenating
in a “straight shot” it is best rather than turning a corner. But ½ mile is too
far away to do any good at all.
As a rule of thumb honeybees will forage about two miles
from the hive but as distance increases the likelihood a bee will visit your
trees decrease. If you know where there is a pollenating tree for yours, take a
“bouquet” of branches and put them in a vase of water at the base of the tree
as the flowers are about to open. Delay pruning the pollenizer tree so that you
can incorporate this technique as part of your management plan for your fruit
trees. You can swap bouquets with your neighbor to improve fruit set.
from the hive but as distance increases the likelihood a bee will visit your
trees decrease. If you know where there is a pollenating tree for yours, take a
“bouquet” of branches and put them in a vase of water at the base of the tree
as the flowers are about to open. Delay pruning the pollenizer tree so that you
can incorporate this technique as part of your management plan for your fruit
trees. You can swap bouquets with your neighbor to improve fruit set.
Plant a pollenizer tree in the same hole, 18 inches apart,
for the sole sake of providing a few flowers for pollination.
for the sole sake of providing a few flowers for pollination.
Make
sure the problem is pollination. There is some misinformation out there about
what needs pollination and what doesn’t. Fruit set is usually not an “on and
off” switch. Poor fruit set, few fruit on the tree, can be due to poor
pollination.