Tree Fruit News: Scaffolds Digest, Week 3 

This post a is text digest of the new Scaffolds Podcast. To listen to the original, visit the following link: Scaffolds Podcast   Entomology Update with Monique Rivera   Let’s jump right in and talk about the idea of bulletproofing IPM programs. This is a topic of conversation probably everywhere in agriculture over the past couple of Read More…

Tree Fruit Blog: Managing Peach Blocks with No Crop  

Win Cowgill, Professor Emeritus Rutgers University Win Enterprises International, LLC   2023 has proven to be a difficult season weather wise, especially northern Peach growing states for peaches. February 4, minimum cold temperatures reached minus 12 to minus 16 in the NY Hudson Valley at some locations. Similar low temperatures in Massachusetts and Connecticut were observed. Read More…

Tree Fruit Blog: Diazinon and Ziram restrictions for the Canadian Market

Anna Wallis, Janet van Zoeren and Monique Rivera, Cornell Cooperative Extension & Cornell University CALS Program What are the actual regulations?  Diazinon and Ziram are two materials recently under scrutiny in tree fruit production. Diazinon is an organophosphate insecticide, that has been an effective management tool for pre-bloom control of San Jose Scale and post-bloom Read More…

Tree Fruit Blog: Intentional Delay of Dormant Pruning for ‘Honeycrisp’ & Other Important Biennial Cultivars (Fuji) 

Mario Miranda Sazo, Fruit Specialist, Cornell Cooperative Extension, Lake Ontario Fruit Program Terence Robinson, Professor, School of Integrative Plant Science Horticulture Section Cornell AgriTech When pruning a Honeycrisp block without knowing the floral bud percentage (% of floral buds in a 100 bud sample of spurs from randomly selected shoots in a Honeycrisp block), you Read More…

Tree Fruit Blog: Performing Floral Bud Evaluations on Honeycrisp Ahead of Precision Pruning

Mike Basedow, Tree Fruit Extension Specialist, CCE-ENYCHP, Northern NY I recently evaluated two Honeycrisp blocks in the Champlain Valley for their percentage of flowering buds so the growers could adjust their pruning practices. The first block is a mature planting on M.26 rootstock, trained to a vertical axis system. Bloom was heavy in this block in Read More…