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"Apple Happy"
by Paul Bransky ©2003 Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service
Since the mid-1970s,
Perry-O and David Sliwa of Decorah, Iowa and Keith Kozub of River
Falls, Wisconsin have searched for organic ways to protect their
apples from pests. The three fruit growers shared some of their
hard-won knowledge at a field day last summer on the Sliwa farm,
including successful strategies to prevent apple maggot and plum
curculio damage, and creative approaches to orchard design.
For market the
Sliwas grow apples, pears, plums, berries, grapes, vegetables, cut
flowers and honey on a forty-acre homestead next to the Upper Iowa
River. Most of our visit took place in their two-acre north orchard,
enclosed by deer fence, where the Sliwas and friends were experimenting
with a variety of crops and ground covers. One of the primary objectives
of the field day was to highlight the interplanting of a young orchard
with market crops and habitat for beneficials to fully utilize the
site and provide income during the years of orchard establishment.
This project was supported by a SARE (Sustainable Agriculture Research
and Education) grant. We saw strawberries, cole crops, and flowering
perennials thriving in mulch beside the trees, and grape vines growing
on the fence. These plants had plenty of sun because the Sliwas
planted their orchard on twenty-foot spacing. The open pattern provides
extra air drainage and light to reduce fungal problems.
The Sliwas try to grow enough flowers near their fruit trees to
provide habitat for beneficial predatory insects as well as pollen
for their honey bees. David said that flowers around the perimeter
would not help the orchard because beneficials stay very close to
their chosen plants. Besides market flowers and strawberries, the
Sliwas have tried buckwheat and white dutch clover. "White
dutch clover is a high quality nectar source," David said.
He felt that buckwheat grew too tall for good air movement, and
he would probably not use it again.
They roto-till
right around the trees to prepare for their other crops. "We
try to avoid tilling too close to the trees, but we are not too
concerned if any surface roots are damaged because it would likely
make a deeper anchored tree," David said.
"Surround"
the apples
To avoid too much damage from insect pests, the Sliwas spray "Surround,"
a specially milled kaolin clay, on the fruit and set out traps.
Surround has especially helped with discouraging plum curculios,
David said, because there is no easy way to trap them. "Researchers
have only recently developed a plum curculio attractant," he
said, though they have trapped apple maggot adults and codling moths
for many years. Until they began spraying Surround two years ago,
the Sliwas could choose to go out every day for three or four weeks
to tap trees and catch curculios which fall onto a bed sheet. Now
they spray Surround when needed. "I watch the apples,"
David said, "and won't spray if I feel there is enough coating,
or don't see much damage." After it dries on the fruit, Surround
acts as a barrier to an insect's normal behavior. "When the
plum curculio crawls on an apple, apparently the clay particles
are attracted to it like a magnet attracts iron filings, so the
insects are repelled," David said. He said that Surround's
specially formulated shape and size cause this effect, whereas regular
kaolin clogs sprayers, does not adhere to foliage, and does not
discourage the insects. Apple maggots and the first flight of codling
moths were also suppressed by Surround.
David begins
spraying around the start of fruit set, when plum curculio egg-laying
begins. "You need to keep monitoring with traps and just keep
walking through the orchard," he said. He tries to minimize
spraying to save work, cut expenses (the spray mixture requires
a lot of material; 1/2 pound per gallon), and to mitigate any potential
damaging effects Surround may have to beneficials. Surround can
last on an apple for more than three weeks. "If you stop your
spray right after the early season, you'll have minimal cleaning
of residue at harvest time."
David put together
a simple sprayer using a 55-gallon barrel on a trailer, a 60 psi
12 volt pump, a 50-foot hose and a sprayer wand. Hand spraying with
a wand controls expense because he can aim just for the fruit. "When
you see a white drip (on the bottom of the apple) it's done,"
he said. The Surround mixes in easily by hand using a long wooden
paddle.
David mentioned
that Surround also helps keep plant temperatures cool resulting
in continued photosynthesis on hot days. Sunburn damage on coated
fruit is also reduced. He said some conventional orchards in Washington
State use Surround just for this purpose.
Insect traps
Although they are pleased with the effectiveness of Surround, the
Sliwas would rather trap than spray, if possible. They have experimented
with a variety of trap designs and attractants. At the field day
they displayed free-standing "kill" and pyramid traps,
and branch-mounted funnel traps. David cited research at Michigan
State University which found trap effectiveness improved 1 1/2 times
with a sex pheromone and doubled with a kairomone (plant scent).
The Sliwas place traps beside a nearby woods (where insects overwinter),
at the orchard perimeter, and in the orchard. David said that each
plum curculio female lays an average of about 200 eggs in its lifetime,
"so I feel every one caught is valuable in reducing damage
immediately, and reducing future populations."
On his four-acre
organic orchard near River Falls, Keith Kozub has pursued the apple
maggot for fifteen years, having lost a lot of apples from the brown
inside tracks they make. "They can become a major problem,"
he said. He tried pyrethrins, but found it hard on beneficials.
"My orchard got way out of balance, so I switched to a different
way," he said. He now uses tangle foot traps to monitor the
populations and provide some control.
Keith has found
that a commercial apple painted with tangletrap makes an excellent
trap for apple maggots. He buys the apples by the case and pierces
each one with 17 gauge wire, curved to hang on a branch. He recommended
using "paintable" tangletrap and disposable dairyman's
gloves for the application. Using real apples rather than plastic
red balls, Keith does not have to buy apple scent. However, because
of the petroleum-based tanglefoot coating, unpeeled apples require
landfill disposable. Ketih also likes how their density keeps real
apples in the tree during a storm. "In a storm the plastic
balls blow off, or into leaves, and leaves get stuck on them,"
he said.
"One trap
on a big standard tree is enough,"he said. "You kind of
get an idea where hot spots are. Maybe they are arriving through
a very narrow area. I might put three or four on the corner when
they come in from strawberry patch." He has also found much
more insects trapped on the south side of his orchard than the north.
"I rarely hang traps on the Connell Reds" he said. "I
think apple maggot and plum curculio don't like waxy skin. Soft
skin is I think more attractive."
Keith prefers
to hang the traps on the south or southwest side of a tree approximately
head high. "Put it out where a fly can see it-you want it to
stick out," he said. "If you have a lot of apples, I sometimes
hang all around the perimeter of a tree."
After a week
Keith scrapes off and counts the apple maggots. "A couple is
not much concern to me; four or more is. Ten or fifteen is enough
to cause major damage," he said. He once caught 98 on one trap,
but said it is rare for him to catch more than eight.
Orchard maintenance
Keith emphasized the importance of through orchard maintenance.
"Generally I think most apple maggots come from right nearby,"
he said, from apples left to lay under untended trees. The larvae
crawl out of apples and into the ground to overwinter as pupae.
Most adults emerge the following year over a several week period,
depending on the weather. Some pupae overwinter a second winter.
"That adds to its unpredictability," Keith said. "Keep
apples off the ground and pick wormy apples," he said. "Every
five days you have to police the windfalls." In his 150 + trees
he can keep up with windfalls by gathering them for a couple hours
twice a week.
Keith grinds
the windfalls and mixes them with other materials to compost in
a stock tank. "Plum curculio and apple maggot can't handle
the heat of apples in a stock tank," he said. For growers who
do not have a grinder, he recommended "put the apples in a
garbage bag and let the sun cook them. Or leave them in a bucket
for a few days."
After planting
trees Keith uses hay mulch around them for two years, then lets
the sod take over. Over the years he has just mowed and left the
clippings there to build top soil. He wondered if this system made
too much nitrogen; he had two feet of new shoot growth last year
with some fire blight. He mows to inhibit meadow voles. "You
don't want to leave them habitat in the fall." he said. "
I lost 100 trees one year from meadow voles." Late in the season
he also sprays humates on the fallen leaves to encourage decay.
Paul Bransky
is a Wisconsin organic vegetable grower, and the editor of the Organic
Broadcaster.
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