Good Fruit Grower

September 2016

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www.goodfruit.com Good Fruit Grower SEPTEMBER 2016 31 Orchard innovators A number of growers hosting the 2016 IFTA New York Study Tour said that to get the benefits of new machinery, you have to adjust orchard practices. For example, Wafler Farms' mechanical platforms are designed with their own tall spindle tipped system in mind, with 12-foot poles, set 3 feet in the ground and tipped inward 1.5 feet from the base of the pole. Trees are planted 3 feet apart, alternating 13 feet and 7 feet between rows, with 1,400 trees per acre. However, they are trained to be narrower at the top — about 18 inches between trees. They also lean into the 13-foot row. The arrangement tightens the space between the trees and the platform and brings the workers closer to the trees. Just as in any relationship, the closer you are, the better, Paul Wafler said. "The tall spindle tipped system places our workers as close to the trees and the fruit as we can get them. If it's not right in front of them, they can easily reach around the tree to get to it." Any variety changes occur in the 7-foot rows. The only traffic the narrower rows get is from mowers and sprayers. Trees are supported on a two-wire system with a vertical stabilizer wire for each tree. A cross-wire to the opposite 7-foot row from posts and from every seventh tree helps trees and the trellis structure withstand heavy winds or crop loads. Wafler favors whips over feathers because he believes they provide supe- rior production in years seven through 25. "I know they are susceptible to transplant shock. But in those first three years, they'll grow aggressively and catch up by year five." They train their trees in an uncon- ventional manner. "We wrap wires to the trees and then wrap trees to the wires," he said. In a tree's first year, they'll attach and fold a 12-foot stabilizer wire for each tree over the trellis wires, attaching it at the top with two clips to keep it from sliding down. Then they'll wrap the stabilizer wire around the tree loosely, so that it doesn't girdle it, while still pro- viding support. At year three, when the central leader grows above the first wire and is below the second, they'll wrap it around the stabilizer wire three or four times, to provide the upward structure for it to grow toward the second wire. Secured below the lower wire, with its central leader wrapped around the top wire, the tree begins to fix branches. When pruning, they'll lazy cut three to four branches at their extreme ends. "We'll leave a stub an inch to 3 inches long. We're looking for a 20-branch equiva- lent per tree, with stubs counting as branches," he said. If crews can put their hands on a tree and touch four to five branches, there are too many in the zone. "We want to be able to touch no more than three," he said. Each branch should be singulated: between the trunk and the end of the branch, there should be no forks, Y's or T's. The goal is to hang four to six apples per branch to produce about 100 apples per tree. From late bloom to early June, workers engage in a task Wafler refers to as "stepping back." His crews cut branches, leaving lower branches longer and nar- rowing the tree upward to create a 3-foot width at the bottom and an 18-inch width at the top. The result is fruit readily visible on the trees throughout the orchard, and with the trees cut and trained as they are, workers can reach all the way around the rows for all tasks, including harvest. The Waflers measure productivity not only on bins per acre, but also on acres covered. "What we want is for our crews to be able to flow though our orchards, covering as many acres as possible," Paul Wafler said. They can do that because they don't always clean pick their apples. "We'll come back to the same block and pick it several times before we're done," he said. "We spot pick almost 100 percent of our blocks now — not because we need to, but because we can." —D. Weinstock TJ Mullinax/Good FruiT Grower Wafler Farms uses a stabilizer wire on young trees, part of an unconventional training technique. "We wrap wires to the trees and then wrap trees to the wires," explains Paul Wafler. Cal Nagy has been using Fase2 for five years. He has found it has allowed more branches to grow on his trees. For decades, AgroLiquid has understood that advanced crop fertility products and agricultural practices come from thorough research and applied technology, not guesswork. at's why everything we learn through our extensive research program goes into the development and manufacture of the most efficient, environmentally responsible crop nutrient products available. Our entire line of fertilizers is formulated to help producers achieve the best possible, highest quality yields, while employing sustainable agricultural practices. Learn more at agroliquid.com "I sell cherries, but I'm in the business of growing trees. AgroLiquid has helped me grow beautiful trees." -Cal Nagy QUALITYProducers Trust AgroLiquid

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