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DaveRave 11-06-2012 01:36 AM

Apple Tree, lubricants?
 
Hello there GB!

I have an apple tree in my back garden that I have only ever tended for, I've never picked the apples but I'm considering it this year.


Each time I have attempted the apples have been covered in a white substance. I assumed it was just plant semen.

It was kind of gross so I just left it, I don't know why it was covered with this semen like lubricant but it did not smell, taste or look nice.

None of my friends have had this problem... can any one help?

Is it just the tree, or is someone having me on?

Any information would be very helpfull!

Thank you!

-David

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 11-06-2012 04:28 AM

Apple Tree, lubricants?
 
DaveRave wrote:
Hello there GB!

I have an apple tree in my back garden that I have only ever tended
for, I've never picked the apples but I'm considering it this year.


Each time I have attempted the apples have been covered in a white
substance. I assumed it was just plant semen.

It was kind of gross so I just left it, I don't know why it was
covered with this semen like lubricant but it did not smell, taste or
look nice.

None of my friends have had this problem... can any one help?

Is it just the tree, or is someone having me on?

Any information would be very helpfull!

Thank you!

-David


Assuming that it is not you who is doing the leg-pulling, plants do not have
semen so it must be something else. Can you describe it in more detail?
Better still how about a picture.

D


echinosum 13-06-2012 04:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaveRave (Post 961253)
Each time I have attempted the apples have been covered in a white substance. I assumed it was just plant semen.

It was kind of gross so I just left it, I don't know why it was covered with this semen like lubricant but it did not smell, taste or look nice.

Mysterious. Do you mean the fruits or the trees are so covered? There is a tree disease called southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii), colloquially tree mucus, which affects apple trees, but the "mucus" is on the bark rather than the apples. Common in North America.

Powdery mildew is a white coating, but it's powdery rather than slimy, and on the leaves rather than the fruit, though I suppose it could get knocked onto the fruit.

In an area very close to bee hives, plants can get covered in pollen dropped by bees as they return to their hive, but this covers everything not just apple trees.


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