Apple Orchard Systems

A New Publication from IDFTA

An orchard system is both a strategy and a recipe for the establishment and efficient management of trees in an orchard with the goal of producing sufficient yield of high quality fruit to be profitable. Apple growers must make critical decisions about the components of orchard systems, e.g., rootstock, tree density and tree quality, before a new orchard can be planted. To help producers with these decisions, an Apple Orchard Systems Workshop was held at the International Dwarf Fruit Tree Association (IDFTA) annual conference, February 15-16, 2003, in Syracuse, New York. The proceedings of the workshop, titled Apple Orchard Systems (Compact Fruit Tree, Vol. 36 Special Issue, June 2003), includes 12 chapters prepared by six specialists in apple orchard management. There are chapters for each of the components of orchard systems: tree density, rootstock, tree quality, tree support and tree training.

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The decisions an orchardist must make before an orchard is planted will have a greater impact on performance and profitability of the orchard than the routine management of the orchard after it is planted. The goal of the workshop was to provide the information necessary to both plan in advance and then manage a new high density apple planting.

Workshop topics include tree physiology, balancing vegetative growth and fruiting and the economics of orchard systems including estimates of net present value and internal rate of return. Understanding tree physiology, particularly the importance of sunlight interception, which is correlated with yield, and sunlight distribution, which is related to fruit quality, is critical to making decisions about tree spacing, tree height and spread. Knowledge of the trees' response to specific pruning and training techniques is necessary to encourage early cropping, sustained heavy cropping and achieve high fruit quality.

The 12 chapters have been written by the following international authorities in pomology and tree fruit economics: Dr. Stuart Tustin, HortResearch, New Zealand; Dr. Terence Robinson, Cornell University New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva; Steve Hoying, Lake Ontario Tree Fruit Team, Cornell Cooperative Extension, New York; Alison DeMarree, agricultural economist, Lake Ontario Tree Fruit Team, Cornell Cooperative Extension, New York; Kurt Werth, fruit advisor and director of SK Südtirol (Variety Innovation Consortium of South Tyrol), Italy; and Dr. Bruce Barritt, Washington State University Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center, Wenatchee.

Apple Orchard Systems is a valuable reference for both growers who must make decisions about rootstock, tree density, tree support system, tree quality and tree training and also for pomology students learning about orchard management.

Apple Orchard Systems can be purchased for $24.95 plus $3.50 handling and a postage charge from the IDFTA Business office (14 S. Main Street, Middleburg, PA 17842; fax 570-837-0090; idfta@ptd.net) or the IDFTA web site (www.idfta.org).

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