Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Growing Orchard

Changing the pH of the soil is slow business, but the blueberries continue the fight. Enough flowers this spring to feed my hungry face with blueberries this summer! Maybe next year the soil+age of the plants will = surplus available for sale!
Grapes have been unimpressive in my poor soil, but this year their roots finally seem to have established some dominance against the stubborn grass. After two years, we see some top growth. (Grape plants have since been weeded)
The orchard will produce its first grapes!
The lonesome Kiwi survives. Two of her sisters and her mate have died. Without a male, these plants cannot produce fruit.
One of five blueberry varieties in the orchard.
There will be a huge amount of currants coming my way! I am excited to have a crop to harvest. Growing perennials is a game of patience, seeing results is a gift. One of 50+ currant bushes at the orchard...yum!
A few Haskap/honeyberries have already ripened. Unfortunately the 30 plants I planted last spring have produced collectively 8 berries. Here's hoping next spring will prove more rewarding. In the meantime, I have planted a further 25 haskap plants this spring and continue to propagate new plants from cuttings.
Saskatoons ripening in the sun. I purchased two varieties of Saskatoon. Lee 8 (pictured here) is producing fruit on every plant. The Martin variety has not produced a single berry.

2 comments:

  1. Awesome that your plants are taking some soil authority!! Will you plant another Kiwi? How do you know if it's a female or male plant?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm propagating more from my female but I won't buy a new male until I am sure this one is ready to flower and make fruit. I know it's female because I bought a female! The males will flower and make pretty variegated leaves but they won't make fruit. A lot of people use the males as an ornamental vine. The female have plain green leaves but can make grape-sized kiwi fruit.

      Thanks!! :)

      Delete