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Peach trees require effective pollination for fruitful harvests, making it essential to understand the pollination process. Self-fertile peach tree varieties can produce fruit on their own, but cross-pollination with compatible varieties can enhance yield.
The following trees will set some fruit by themselves. Apricots, European Plums such as Damon & Green Gage, Italian & Stanley Prunes, Tart Cherries such as Montmorency and Lapin, Peaches, Persimmon, Figs & Nectorines.
Peach trees can be propagated by seed, cuttings (use of hardwood cuttings), grafting, and budding. However, among these options, commercial farmers often use only the last two since they assure variety purity, good success rate, plant health and early fruit production.
4 Ιουν 2018 · Download the PDF Pollination Charts. Not finding the pollination information you need? Comment below to ask our plant experts your question!
19 Ιουν 2024 · Follow these simple steps to maximize your peach harvest through hand pollination: Collect Pollen. Identify blossoms that have just opened and not been pollinated yet. Gently pick several open blossoms from one tree. Place in your container. Use the paintbrush to sweep pollen from the anthers (male parts) of the flowers.
The Raintree Nursery catalog provides charts showing which varieties can pollinate each other for each type of fruit. In most cases, pollinating fruit trees requires at least two trees, and they should be different varieties, as discussed below.
Examples of self-pollinated fruits are sour cher-ries, apricots, and peaches. Other species require cross-pollination, and can only set fruit by fertilization from another cultivar. Cross-pollination is the transfer of pollen from one cultivar to the flower of a different cultivar.