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Produce => Edible Plants => Topic started by: kenkew on June 13, 2005, 10:48:27

Title: Cherry tree
Post by: kenkew on June 13, 2005, 10:48:27
This is the first year my new tree has produced cherries. Quite small but there, non-the-less. The worry is that most of the leaves on the tips are a mass of black-fly. To spray or not to spray, that is the question??
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Rosa_Mundi on June 13, 2005, 19:36:25
If it's as bad as you say, probably yes. Check your chosen spray carefully to make sure you can use it on crops - it'll probably be a contact insecticide, so you'll need to make sure that you wet as many of the aphids as possible.
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Merry Tiller on June 13, 2005, 23:05:04
I have to spray my cherry and my plum or I get no fruit, it's either that or dig 'em up ???
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: redimp on June 13, 2005, 23:09:46
You should be able to get something that is organic approved if you do need to spray.  Also spray last thing at night so you take out as few of the beneficial beasties as possible - possibly pick off any ladybirds etc that you find before you spray.
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Merry Tiller on June 13, 2005, 23:19:55
Why do you assume he's organic? ??? ???
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: redimp on June 13, 2005, 23:41:33
Always assume someone is organic and let them say otherwise.  That's my motto - always assume the best in people.

(now that last statement might get me in a bit of trouble)
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: kenkew on June 17, 2005, 13:17:42
This is how bad.
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v299/Kenkew/DSC00445.jpg)
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Robert_Brenchley on June 17, 2005, 14:47:04
When I was a kid we had a morello cherry growing outside the back door which was always covered in aphids; the leaves used to look just like that. We never got a crop off it; the birds had it all, and my parents used to insist you couldn't eat it anyway. But the tree grew well and seemed healthy despite the aphids.
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Black Forest Dan on June 20, 2005, 15:45:12
I planted our cherry tree early last spring and this year its leaves are covered with black mites just like the ones kenkew described. I am brewing up a couple of litres of garlic-based spray, having found the recipe on this site (6oz garlic whizzed up in 3tbsp linseed oil, filtered and mixed with around 2ltrs of rainwater) - I hope this will do the trick - it's supposed to be good against aphids and mites.

It's not my lucky year for fruit trees, the apple tree is shedding many of its leaves after a heavy pruning session last year. I fear we went too far, and it's now going to take at least a year to recover!
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Mrs Ava on June 20, 2005, 23:38:49
My mums morello is always covered in blackfly like that, and every year there are masses of cherries, and every year it is a race who can get the cherries first, mum or the birds!  The amazing thing is, the birdies eat the fruit, and leave the stone hanging there in the tree on its little stem! 

I am currently the owner of a huge tub of cherries in the fridge.  Now, make jam, or scoff them????
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: smartie on June 21, 2005, 12:40:05
Scoff 'em!!  ;D
You know you want to!  ;)
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: gledhillbo on June 22, 2005, 16:45:10
When should I net off my cherries to stop birds? At what colour/stage of development?
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Rosa_Mundi on June 22, 2005, 18:12:59
They will eat them before you'd consider them fully ripe, so I guess you'd be talking about when they start to show red.
EJ - my starlings used to leave the bare pips suspended on the tree, too  ;D
Title: Re: Cherry tree
Post by: Mrs Ava on June 22, 2005, 22:00:39
yum yum, cherries gone, and no jam for my toast this winter!  :'(