Backyard Orchard Culture

Plan backyard orchards for variety and prolonged harvests
For years, most of the information about growing fruit came from commercial orchards that advocated methods promoting maximum size for maximum yield but required 12-foot ladders for pruning, thinning and picking, and 400 to 600 square feet of land per tree. Tree spacing had to allow for tractors and heavy automated equipment. Homeowners today do not need or expect commercial results from their backyard fruit trees. A commercial grower would never consider using his commercial methods in a residential backyard, and neither should a homeowner.

Prolonged Harvest of Tree-ripe Fruit From a Small Space
Backyard orchard culture means planting close together several or many fruit varieties which ripen at different times and keeping the trees small by summer pruning. Homeowners today have less space for fruit trees, less time to take care of them, and less time to process or preserve large crops than in the past. Plan today’s backyard orchards with different objectives in mind.

High-Density Planting and Successive Ripening
Maximizing the length of the fruit season means planting several (or many) fruit varieties with different ripening times. Because of the limited space available to most homeowners, this means using one or more of the techniques for close-planting and training fruit trees; two, three or four trees in one hole, espalier, and hedgerow are the most common of these techniques. Four trees instead of one can provide ten to twelve weeks of fruit instead of only two or three.

Close-planting Restricts Tree Vigor – Helping Dwarf Trees Naturally
Trees won’t grow as big when there are competing trees close by. Close-planting works best when rootstocks of similar vigor are planted together. For example, for a four-in-one-hole planting, four trees of the same rootstock would be easier to maintain than a combination of different rootstocks.

Planting More Varieties Means Better Cross-pollination
In our climate, this can also mean more consistent production of pears, apples, plums, and cherries.

Typical High-Density Planting Option Diagrams


Planting Description

Planting Diagram

Area Dimensions: 8′ x 8′
Number of Holes: 1
Number of Trees: 2
Distance Apart: 18 inches

Area Dimensions: 5′ x 10′
Number of Trees: 2 (espaliered)
Area Dimensions: 10′ x 10′
Number of Holes: 1
Number of Trees: 4
Distance Apart: 18 inches

Area Dimensions: 10′ x 20′
Number of Holes: 2
Number of Trees: 8
Distance Apart: 18 inches (in each set)

The key things to remember are you do not need a lot of space and that you can plant multiple trees and even different kinds of trees in a small area that the old methods would have told you was not possible.

These are just some sample diagrams to show you how high-density planting can work in your own backyard, and, in fact, you do not even need a backyard. You can create your own functional, practical orchard on a patio or you can use containers and plant your “backyard orchard” on a sunny balcony.

Many backyard orchard possibilities exist using these new, but proven methods. Come in and spend a few minutes with your Alden Lane fruit tree professionals to learn your options for your particular space, lifestyle and backyard orchard goals.

Color in January

You might be surprised to see how many plants are producing color in the winter here at Alden Lane! Azure Bush Germander is in full (blue) bloom, Grevilleas and Leucadendrons are plants from Down Under, showing foliage or flower color now. Com into the nursery now to select plants that give your garden year-round appeal.

grevillea-january Grevilleas
These beauties come from the Land Down Under. Grevilleas grace the winter garden with swirls of pink or red blossoms. They range in height from rolling groundcovers to towering trees, most grevilleas in the nursery are in the mid-range as far as heights go, at about 4-5 feet. Grevilleas are drought tolerant!
sasanqua-january
Sasanqua Camellias
Many Sasanqua Camellias begin to bloom in November and flower colorfully through winter. Generally thought of as moderate in height, they typically grow in the shade or morning sun reaching heights to 5. However, each variety is different, some grow more upright and some scramble. 
teucrium-january
Bush Germander
Sporting electric blue flowers on stunning gray foliage, azure Bush Germander is a drought tolerant, winter blooming show-stopper. Can be sheared to any height or shape. Left alone it will be about 5′ high, Bush Germander has been seen in a neighborhood nearby kept as a 1′ high hedge, and in our demo garden as a 5′, free-form shrub.
protea-january Proteas
Proteas are thought of as frost tender in our area, but I did find this one in the nursery.  The flowers are bold and exotic. growing on large shrubs
leucodendron-january
Leucodendrons
Leucadendrons are similar to proteas but hardy and generally grown for their leaf color though they do flower; just smaller. Being from Australia, they detest phosphorus, so don’t feed them a normal fertilizer, skip the feeding or provide a bit of cottonseed meal.
citrus-january Citrus
Citrus usually get all dressed up and showy in winter; loaded with fruit. begging to be eaten, but certainly attractive for their ornamental value as well. Heights vary and can be controlled with pruning.  Citrus are somewhat frost tender, so be prepared to cover when cold.