Young fruit tree grows suckers
On Wed, 29 May 2013 15:59:24 -0700 (PDT), Higgs Boson
wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2013 2:47:08 PM UTC-7, Brooklyn1 wrote:
Higgs Boson wrote:
I have two fruit trees about 3-4 years old. The apricot (Blenheim) is doing fine, but the plum (Santa Rosa) keeps making suckers from the base. I removed these and it looked like the tree was leafing out the same as the apricot, but now more suckers from the base.
Is there a reason that only one of these keeps making suckers? Inquiring minds...
Probably each has a different root stock. Some stone fruit produces
suckers forever. I have two plum trees, both different, but both
produce suckers every year, a few from below the graft and a few from
above the graft... it's just the nature of the beast. Some I catch
early and simply brush them off with my hand, some escape my view,
become more established and require a pruner. My ginkgos produce
suckers all along their trunk constantly. I always considered suckers
an indication of a healthy plant.
Tx, Brooklyn - I'll just keep on pulling/cutting/digging them off.
But WHY do you consider suckers an "indication of a healthy plant" (Inquiring minds g.) It could be argued that the plant is dissipating sp or scattering its changes of producing fruit, which would set seed, which is the tree's raison d'etre.
Plants are naturally frugal... they wouldn't waste their energy
producing suckers, or anything extraneous, unless they have an
abundance of stored energy.
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