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Small Fruit Production

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Hill System. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. Pruning Raspberries. Summer. Remove fruited floricanes ... Very winter hardy. 102. Planting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Small Fruit Production


1
Small Fruit Production
  • Teryl R. Roper
  • Dept. of Horticulture
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Small Fruits for Wisconsin
  • Strawberry
  • Raspberry
  • Blueberry
  • Cranberry
  • Lingonberry
  • Juneberry
  • Currants
  • Gooseberry

4
Soils for berries
  • Well drained loamy soils
  • High organic matter
  • Amend with compost, etc.
  • pH between 6.0 and 7.0
  • Except blueberries lingonberries(4.5 to 5.5)

5
Site preparation
  • Begin the year before planting
  • Soil test add P, K fertilizer if needed
  • Adjust pH (if needed possible)
  • Control perennial weeds
  • Cultivation
  • Non-residual herbicides
  • Add organic matter
  • Manure, green manures, compost

6
Obtaining Plants
  • Purchase plants from a reputable nursery
  • True to name
  • Disease free
  • Virus indexed
  • Dont save, dont share
  • Arrange for spring delivery

7
Strawberry History
  • Fragaria vesca Northern hemisphere
  • F. moschata European
  • F. virginiana Eastern North American
  • F. chiloensis Pacific coast

8
Strawberry History
  • Amédée François Frézier
  • Experienced engineer mathematician
  • Amateur botanist
  • Jan. 6, 1712 left France for Chile Peru
  • June 18, 1712 arrived at Concepcion
  • Coincidentally, Frézier means strawberry

9
History
  • For two years Frezier mapped the city, noted
    strong and weak points, studied the people, and
    described the agricultural and mineral resources.
  • Took note of the large fruited strawberry growing
    there.

10
History
  • Feb 19, 1714 Frezier left Chile and took with him
    several potted plants of the Chilean Strawberry.
  • August 17, 1714 Frezier arrived in Marseille.
  • Five strawberry plants were still alive.

11
Distribution
  • 2 plants to ships cargo master
  • 1 to minister of fortifications
  • 1 or 2 to Antoine de Jussieu, director of the
    Jardin des Plants in Paris (Royal Gardens)

12
Distribution
  • News of the large fruited strawberry spread
    quicklyas did plant material
  • Brittany
  • Netherlands
  • Productivity was poor, apparently Frezier had
    selected staminate plants

13
Hybridization
  • In gardens and commercial plantings F. virginiana
    was present and proved a suitable pollinator.
  • Hybrid seedling plants were large fruited, firm,
    and had better color than F. chiloensis
  • These chance hybridizations were the basis for
    modern strawberry production

14
Strawberries
  • Now known as F. ananassa
  • Name is based on the pineapple like flavor and
    smell of the fruit.
  • Our modern strawberries were based on the chance
    meeting of two western hemisphere species in
    France.

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Strawberry Plant
  • Crown
  • Leaves
  • Stolons (runners)
  • Roots
  • Trusses (flowers and fruit)
  • Plantings last 3-5 years

17
Flower Truss
25-40
25-40
Crown
50-10
Roots
Stolon or Runner
18
Tertiary
Secondary
Primary
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Stolons or Runners
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Strawberry Flower
Petals
Anther
Stigma
Style
Receptacle
Achene
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Fruiting Habits
  • June bearers Short Day
  • Everbearers Long Day
  • Day Neutral Insensitive

25
Day Neutral Strawberries
  • Based on a collection of F. virginiana made in
    Utahs Wasatch mountains by Royce Bringhurst,
    Breeder at UC-Davis.
  • Incorporated into breeding program.
  • Is now the basis for the strawberry industries in
    California, Florida and other warm climates.

26
Planting
  • Spring after danger of frost past
  • Proper depth
  • Spread roots
  • Firm soil around crown

27
PLANTING DEPTH
Shallow
Correct
Deep
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Strawberry planting systems
  • Matted Row
  • 12 to 18 between plants
  • 36 to 40 row spacing
  • Beds 12-18 wide
  • Runners encouraged
  • Spaced Plant
  • 6 between plants
  • 36 to 40 row spacing
  • Single plant row
  • Runners removed

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Spaced Plant System
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Spaced Plant System
36
Remove blossoms the first year
  • Promotes vegetative growth

37
Irrigation
  • Strawberry is shallow rooted
  • The soil must not dry out
  • Require 1 to 2 inches per week

38
Winter Mulch
  • Straw 2-3
  • Apply when soil freezes (late)
  • Remove in spring as leaves emerge (early)
  • Spun-bonded polyester row covers

39
Winter Protection
3 to 4 inches of clean straw
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Place mulch between rows
44
Alive ?
Dead ?
45
Frost Protection
  • Proper site is important
  • Tarping is the best and easiest solution in home
    gardens
  • Tarps
  • Blankets
  • Row cover material

46
Renovation
  • Begin immediately after harvest
  • Control weeds
  • Mow leaves if leaf diseases serious
  • Narrow rows
  • Place soil around crowns
  • Incorporate mulch
  • Fertilize

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Fertility
  • Amend soil before planting
  • Do Not add fertilizer before harvest
  • Get leaves, not fruit

51
Fertility
  • Year 1 when runners form apply
  • ¾ to 1 ½ lbs ammonium sulfate OR
  • ½ to 1/3 lbs urea per 100 feet of row
  • Bearing years at renovation AND one month later
    apply
  • ½ lb ammonium sulfate OR
  • 1/3 lb urea per 100 feet of row
  • Water thoroughly

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Cultivars
  • June bearing
  • Earliglow
  • Honeoye
  • Cavendish
  • Winona
  • Day neutral
  • Selva
  • Tribute
  • Tristar

55
Questions?
56
Raspberries
57
Origin and History
  • Rubus ideaus European
  • R. strigosus North American
  • First domesticated by Greeks
  • Historical records of production throughout
    Europe by middle ages

58
Origin and History
  • With the application of modern plant breeding
    techniques, breeders crossed R. ideaus with R.
    strigosus and created stronger, larger fruited,
    disease resistant hybrids
  • These now form the basis of cultivated
    raspberries around the world.

59
Raspberry Plant
  • Woody perennial
  • Crown
  • Roots
  • Canes Primocanes floricanes
  • Leaves
  • Flowers

60
Raspberry Plant
  • Biennial growth and fruiting habit
  • Primocanes
  • Floricanes
  • Plantings last 8-10 years

61
Tips
Floricanes
Side Branches
Primocanes
Crown
Roots
Crown Buds
62
Immature Buds
70
Fruit buds
20
6
4
Leader Bud
Roots
63
Stigma
Style
Anther
Filament
Ovule
Receptacle
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Raspberry Fruiting Habits
  • Summer Bearing
  • Fruit on one year old floricanes
  • Fall Bearing
  • Fruit on primocanes

66
Planting Raspberries
  • In the spring after danger of frosts is past
  • Just lower than in the nursery

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Planting Systems
  • Rows
  • Plants 2-3 feet apart in rows
  • Rows 6-10 feet apart
  • Hills
  • 4 X 4 feet apart

69
Hill System
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Hill System
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Pruning Raspberries
  • Summer
  • Remove fruited floricanes
  • Thin out new shoots
  • Dormant
  • Head floricanes by ¼
  • Remove weak or damaged wood
  • Thin canes to 4-6 per foot of row

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BEFORE
AFTER
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Fertility
  • 4 to 6 cups per 100 feet of row
  • Timing
  • Early spring (early May)
  • Late spring (early June)

88
Mulching
  • Mulches are desirable to
  • Retain moisture
  • Protect roots
  • Reduce weeds
  • Straw, shavings, sawdust
  • Sod between rows

89
Harvesting
  • Red, yellow, black raspberries
  • The cap pulls clean leaving the receptacle
  • Blackberries
  • The receptacle is removed along with the fruit

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Other Brambles
  • Black raspberries R. occidentalis
  • Purple raspberries R. neglectus
  • Interspecific hybrids
  • Boysenberries red x blackberry
  • Tayberries red 4 x black 8
  • Blackberries Many species

92
Raspberry Cultivars
  • Summer Bearing
  • Boyne
  • Nova
  • Killarney
  • Reveille
  • Titan
  • Fall Bearing
  • Autumn Britten
  • Autumn Bliss
  • Ruby
  • Heritage

93
Raspberry Cultivars
  • Yellow
  • Honeyqueen
  • Goldie
  • Fall Gold
  • Purple
  • Amethyst
  • Brandywine
  • Royalty

94
Break Time!
95
Bush Fruit
  • Blueberries
  • Juneberries
  • Gooseberries
  • Currants
  • Red
  • Black
  • Culture is very similar

96
Bushfruit Plant
  • Woody perennial
  • Crown
  • Roots
  • Canes

97
Planting
  • In the spring after danger of frost
  • Plant at same depth as nursery
  • Make sure roots are spreading, not spiraling
  • Water immediately

98
Pruning
  • Renewal pruning
  • Remove the oldest 3-5 canes
  • Thin out small weak shoots
  • Keep the canopy from becoming dense

99
Fertility
  • Apply a small amount of high N fertilizer in the
    spring each year
  • Base on growth and vigor

100
Currants Gooseberries
  • Less popular
  • Thorny
  • Used in cooking
  • Cleaning fruit isdifficult

101
Currants Gooseberries
  • Do best in good soils
  • With adequate light
  • Regular irrigation
  • Very winter hardy

102
Planting
  • Set plants 1-2 inches deeper than in the nursery
    to promote stronger roots
  • Set plants 3-4 feet apart

103
Before
After
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Cultivars
  • Currants
  • Red Lake
  • White Imperial
  • MN 71
  • Black Currants
  • Consort
  • Crusader
  • Gooseberries
  • Pixwell
  • Captivator
  • Hinnonmaki Red
  • Hinnonmaki Yellow

106
Juneberries
  • Commonly used as an ornamental
  • Grows to 6-15 feet tall
  • Very hardy (zone 2)
  • Also known as
  • Saskatoon
  • Serviceberry
  • Shadberry

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Sites
  • Prefers soils with high organic matter
  • Soil pH 5.5-7.5
  • Some drought tolerance, no tolerance to ponding

109
Pruning
  • Bear fruit on one year old wood
  • Prune out
  • Canes 5 years old
  • Diseased canes
  • Weak spindly canes
  • Control height

110
Cultivars
  • Smoky
  • Honeywood
  • Pembina
  • Northline
  • Propagated by seed

111
Highbush Cranberry
  • Viburnum species
  • Usually planted as ornamentals
  • Three species
  • V. opulus European inedible
  • V. sargentii Sargent
  • V. trilobum American edible

112
Uses
  • Fruit is extremely tart
  • Processed into jams and jellies

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Lingonberries
  • Vaccinium vitis-ideae
  • Mountain cranberry
  • Low growing evergreen shrub related to
    blueberries and cranberries
  • Small red fruit mature in the fall

115
Lingonberry
  • Soils and sites like blueberries
  • Low pH, high OM, well drained

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Blueberry Production
  • Adapted to acid soils
  • Must prepare soil before planting
  • Must provide winter protection
  • Half-high types are best suited to Wisconsin

120
Soil Preparation
  • Add copious amounts of organic matter
  • Add sulfur at least 1 year prior
  • lt¼ lb per square foot, incorporated
  • Cultivate to make soil loose, friable.
  • Soils with high carbonate content cannot have
    pH adjusted

121
Excavate Replace
No peat
Peat
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Winter Protection
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Grapes
  • Vitis labrusca
  • Blue grapes also known as fox grapes. Native to
    western hemisphere. Hardy.
  • V. vinifera
  • Wine grapes native to Europe. Not hardy
  • French-American hybrids
  • Hybrids are marginally hardy

126
Grape Plant
  • Roots. Root readily from cuttings
  • Trunk. May be single or split
  • Cordon. Horizontal permanent stems
  • Canes. One year old wood. Current season
    growth, too.
  • Spurs. Canes pruned off short. 2-3 buds
  • Tendrils. Twining structures borne opposite
    leaves or clusters. Helps hold vines to trellis

127
One year old cane
Current season cane
Cluster
Tendril
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Hardiness
  • French hybrids
  • -10F bud and trunk injury
  • -20F kill buds and trunks
  • American types
  • -20F would cause crop reduction

130
Grape training
Training
131
Cordon/Spur
132
Cordon/Cane
133
Head/Spur
134
Head/Cane
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Cane vs. Spur
137
J system for cold climates
138
Spur pruned rose
139
Balanced pruning
  • American types
  • 30 plus 10 system
  • 30 buds for first pound of prunings
  • 10 buds for each additional pound
  • French hybrids
  • 20 plus 10 system
  • Dont exceed 40-50 buds

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Pollination
  • Grapes with perfect flowers are self fruitful
  • Some wild types have male and female plants.
    Male plants produce flowers, but never produce
    fruit.

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Propagation
  • Cuttings root easily
  • Cut canes with three nodes (bud)
  • Put two buds below ground one above
  • Vines will readily root and grow
  • Can also tip layer

144
Fertility
  • Annual nitrogen application in spring
  • May need additional potassium
  • Micronutrients rarely needed
  • Tissue testing based on petioles

145
Questions?
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Review
  • Correct Site
  • Correct Species
  • Correct Cultivar
  • Correct System
  • Pre-plant preparations
  • Careful Culture
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