By Dan Rahn
University of Georgia
Don’t wait any longer to fertilize your fruit trees.
“It’s best to fertilize fruit trees just before or during bloom,”
said Gerard Krewer, a horticulturist with the University of
Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. “But
if your trees have finished blooming and you haven’t already
fertilized them, go ahead and do it now.”
Fruit trees need fertilizer in the spring, Krewer said. It’s
especially important that they get nitrogen, the nutrient most
crucial to growth. But the trees need phosphorus and potassium,
too.
“Take a soil sample to your county Extension office to find out
exactly how much fertilizer you need,” Krewer said. “If you don’t
take a soil sample, use a complete fertilizer such as 10-10-10.”
Problem with guessing
If you spread just the right amount of fertilizer under your
tree, you’ll get tasty, well-developed fruit and enough growth in
the tree itself to keep it healthy.
If you don’t use enough, you won’t get proper growth in the fruit
or the tree. If you use too much, the tree will produce long
shoots that will have to be pruned back.
A rough rule-of-thumb is to spread 1 pound of 10-10-10 for each
inch of diameter of the tree trunk up to a maximum of 5 pounds
per tree, Krewer said. Then add another half-pound to 1 pound per
inch after harvest, up to a maximum of 5 pounds per tree. Use the
lower rate if the growth is lush.
Best bet
That may not be exactly what your trees need. The soil sample
might tell you to cut down or skip the phosphorus or potassium.
But don’t just skip the fertilizer.
“Fruit trees need fertilizer in the spring every year,” Krewer
said.
Fertilizing fruit trees in the spring keeps the trees healthy and
assures a healthy crop of fruit this year, he said.
Fertilize again after you harvest the fruit. That will boost the
nitrogen in the tree and help it get ready for next year.
(Dan Rahn is a news editor with the University of Georgia
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)