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Thanks Arielle for the excellent information. I have turned to the local extension office for help with our thornless blackberries. We had to wineries interested in our crop. One year we harvested over 50 pounds which was our best harvest. The next year we opened a berry to check it and found a tiny worm in it despite our spraying schedule. Turned out we had a fruit fly problem, a new variety that was just making an appearance in our area. And good luck getting rid of them. We worked and worked and finally gave up. In spite of spraying and picking the fruit just before ripe, we found fruit fly maggots in the berries. I was beat. Blackberries are a lot of work to start with, dealing with dead canes, pruning, weeding. To have to deal with a fruit fly that is almost indestructible is more work than I wanted to put in on the project. The last year that we had a crop, we ate the good berries and tossed the infested to the birds. The chooks loved them. Last winter the freeze took 80% of the the canes. The rest were mowed.
Sometimes ya just got to know when to throw in the towel.
As for Starke's we had one Asian pear tree loaded with fruit break off at the graft. I took pictures of it and emailed Starke's asking them if they could tell me what happened to the tree as it appeared to be a graft failure. After two weeks of no reply, I called them. The person I talked to said yes she had seen the pictures and it appeared that the tree had been damaged by a weed eater. That's when I started laughing and told her nope. Didn't even own a weed eater. She kept telling me it was weed eater damage. I kept telling her I didn't own one at the time of the tree's demise or for the two years since it had been planted. I think we went back and forth like that for a while until she finally offered me 50% off a replacement tree. I told her no thank you and hung up.
A year later I found out about Fire Blight and looking at the pictures we had taken finally decided that the tree's trunk had been damaged by blight leading to it breaking.
I haven't bought anything from them since.
Thanks Arielle2. What also really ticked me off at Starke's is when we went to buy our trees, we told them we wanted trees that were disease resistant. They had been recommended to us by a friend who owned and ran an apple orchard so we thought we were dealing with a reputable nursery. Oh if I knew then what I know now.I have learned the hard way that keeping anything healthy is to know about the diseases and how to feed and manage. Same as anything else.
Sorry about Stark-- I would have hung up too. Which is why Im buying more from Cummins instead. Fireblight is common here. Lots of options to work around that one. Meaning many varieties that are resistant, both in apple and in pears. As far as I know OH x F rootstock is best for pears and any of the Geneva rootstock wil help with apple fireblight. The PRI breeding program has put out a number of fireblight resistant apples. Fireblight is tough to beat, and very common around me.
Like I said, Stark interested in sales sales sales.... learning to care for the plants? nope
Most likely it turn off the mobile data when it "upgraded". I guess so you can't accidentally use up all your data time. I have mine turned off unless I need it for something specific.I “wasn’t connected to the internet.” Well, I’m driving! My internet is at
home.