Yep, wind is a real killer of fruit blossoms in spring. More than half our Pomegranate flowers get torn off during our vicious wind blasts but somehow manage to give decent yields by Autumn.
40 yrs ago I had a wonderful fig tree that yielded well... however I cut it down. Got tired of the ants, rats, birds, destroying figs, & then the June bugs clung heavily on the limbs every summer Yuch! When we planted new fruit trees we avoided any of the sweeter soft-skin fruit trees like peaches, figs, apricots, mango, plums, etc & only planted acidic citrus & hard skin fruit trees ~ Pink Grapefruit, Lemon, Pomegranate & the Guava bushes have a very tart acidic taste that don't appeal to wild life either.
Only our chickens will play tether ball w/ a very low-hanging Pomegranate but it takes them several days to finally penetrate the hard outer shell. It gives them entertainment to play w/ the swinging Pom much like a swinging cabbage
Pomegranate trees
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Hens relaxing under the Pom trees
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Lemon tree that hens use as shade (hens lower corner of photo)
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Grapefruit tree