Production and Harvesting
Planting fruit trees can be a very rewarding experience for both commercial growers and home gardeners. Penn State Extension provides educational resources on growing and harvesting fruit crops such as apples, cherries, peaches, strawberries, and raspberries. Tips on thinning and pollination can be accessed, as well.
How to Plant Fruits and Fruit Trees
The first step in planting fruits and fruit trees is finding the right spot. Most plants require plenty of sunlight to fuel fruit production, so choose a planting area that receives full sun the majority of the day.
In most parts of the US, fruit crops are planted in early spring. However, before planting fruit trees, ensure that the soil is dry enough to crumble in your hand. Additional suggestions for home orchards include using dwarfing rootstocks, growing strawberries in pots, and growing currants in partial shade.
Growing Small Fruits
Small fruits require less space than trees and are an excellent choice for both orchards and backyards. By growing fruits at home, you can enjoy nutrient-rich fruit from early summer through late fall.
Small fruit varieties include blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, and goji berries. They also include strawberries – one of the most popular and easiest fruit crops. Depending on the variety, strawberries fruit in June (“June-bearers”) or throughout summer (day-neutral types).
Learn how to grow strawberries and raspberries in containers and discover what it takes to grow brambles with Penn State Extension’s online courses.
Growing Fruit Trees
Growing fruit trees is a satisfying undertaking, but there are many considerations that need to be addressed prior to planting the first tree. Begin by deciding on the type of tree you’d like to grow – apple, pear, or stone fruit (e.g. peach, apricot, cherry, or plum).
If you want to grow fruits commercially, it’s important to focus on the orchard establishment and site preparation. Assess all factors that will affect production efficiency, fruit quality, and orchard sustainability.
Apple trees are a particularly popular cultivar. Apples can be an excellent choice for large orchards and smaller spaces alike. Learn how to start producing fruit in your yard with the Growing Apple Trees workshop.
Successful fruit production involves several key practices – pollination, thinning, pruning, irrigation, and fertilization.
Pollination
To produce fruit, most trees go through pollination – the transfer of pollen from the male part (stamen) to the female part of a flower (stigma). Birds, bees, and insects that help carry pollen are referred to as pollinators.
Most orchards rely on solitary bees and honey bees for pollination as their abundance can be managed from year to year. During bloom, pesticide sprays should be used with caution in order to protect pollinators.
Thinning and Pruning
Fruit trees often set more fruit than they can support. Leaving too much fruit on a tree, however, can weaken the tree and make it more susceptible to pests.
Pruning fruit trees, especially apples and pears, helps develop the desired tree shape, increases produce quality, and improves air circulation within the tree.
Along with pruning, thinning can help the fruit to develop to its maximum size, reduce the spread of diseases, and promote return bloom in the following season. Thinning is a highly effective crop load management tool for stone fruit and apple tree growers.
Irrigation and Fertilization
Uneven precipitation can cause plant stress, affecting both crop productivity and produce quality. Frequent irrigation and fertilization are required to meet the crop’s water and nutrient needs.
Irrigation systems, including the drip-irrigation method, provide trees with a consistent source of moisture and minimize stress during drought periods. Proper irrigation timing can increase crop yield and quality.
Fruit tree fertilization refers to the nutrients added to the soil. The degree of fertilization depends on the desired type of growth. A nutritional analysis can help you choose an appropriate fertilizer for the next season.
Harvesting Fruits
Timing is key when determining when to harvest fruit from your trees. Checking the ripeness of a few individual fruits can help decide whether trees are ready for picking. Ripening periods, however, vary depending on the fruit variety. With apples, for instance, background color, starch content, and firmness are the most important factors in guiding harvest timing.
For successful tree fruit harvesting, access Penn State Extension resources on orchard management, fruit maturity indicators, and post-harvest handling. Information on harvest assist technologies and harvesting home-grown fruit is available.
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News2024 Pennsylvania Apple Maturity Report - October 18
Date Posted 10/21/2024The Pennsylvania Apple Maturity Report is a weekly program to inform producers about the maturity of the most common apple cultivars sampled from three regions represented by three counties: Adams, Berks, and Centre. -
Tools and Apps$300.00
Keeping Apples Safe in the Packinghouse
This training package includes videos on food safety for apple packinghouses, covering foodborne illnesses, contamination routes, and sanitation programs. -
ArticlesTissue Nutrient Analysis for Berry Crops: Getting the Most for Your Money
Tissue analysis is a valuable tool that can provide insights into a planting's nutritional status, but taking a sample according to recommendations is essential for getting good results. -
ArticlesUnmanned Aerial Vehicle-Based Crop Scouting in Fruit Trees
As one of the United States' largest producers of tree-bearing fruits, Pennsylvania is the 4th largest producer of apples and the 3rd largest producer of peaches. However, growers are faced with new and different challenges every year. -
ArticlesFruit Disorders - Harvest Practices to Prevent Storage Disorders in Honeycrisp
There are many factors that affect Honeycrisp storage behavior, and some occur during harvest. -
ArticlesFruit Disorders - Practices to Manage Storage Disorders in Honeycrisp
If risk of bitter pit is high, fruit should be stored without conditioning and marketed earlier than conditioned fruit. Fruit with low bitter pit risk and susceptibility to chilling injuries should be conditioned and stored at 38°F. -
ArticlesAn Overview of Advanced Weed Management Technologies for Orchards
Effective weed management is a crucial component of orchard farming and demands great attention and precision. -
Tools and AppsTrellis Construction Workbook
This tool will assist growers with the decision making process of determining the cost of two trellis systems. -
ArticlesFrost, Critical Temperatures, and Frost Protection
In nearly all Pennsylvania orchards at some time, there is a problem with late spring frosts that can damage the flowers and reduce the crop. -
ArticlesIntroduce and Evaluate an Unmanned Ground Sprayer for Vineyards and Orchards
Traditional spraying systems in orchards and vineyards operate at a constant rate using a standard nozzle setup, which can be inefficient due to variable row spacing and canopy sizes. -
ArticlesFruit Tree Pruning - Summer Pruning Cautions
Summer pruning is a vague term and simply refers to the time of year pruning is performed (when trees have foliage) and does not describe the type of pruning cuts. -
ArticlesFruit Harvest - Estimating Apple Yield and Fruit Size
Early-season yield and packout predictions are useful for growers and packers to plan for adequate harvest labor and storage space and to develop an orderly marketing plan. -
ArticlesFruit Harvest - Handling of Frozen Apples
Apple fruit will withstand up to 4 hours at 28°F before serious injury occurs. Recovery depends not only on the extent of freezing, but also the rate of thawing. -
ArticlesFruit Color - Promoting Red Color Development in Apple
Fruit surface color is complex due to genetics and mutations, environmental factors, crop load, plant nutrition, plant stresses, and plant growth regulators. -
Guides and PublicationsStarting at $15.00
Tree Fruit Production Guide
Get the most up-to-date information on growing tree fruit on a commercial scale. Revised information and a refreshed look for 2024. -
ArticlesGrowing Fruit Plants from Seed
During the cold winter period people begin thinking about their vegetable gardens and looking at all the seed catalogs. They also think about that good apple or pear they had from their local farmer's market. -
ArticlesNitrogen Fertilization of Peach Trees
Unless soils are deficient in a nutrient, such as sandy soils, fruit trees respond more to nitrogen (N) application than any other nutrient. -
ArticlesSources Of Plant Disease In Greenhouses
Where do diseases begin? It is important to prevent losses due to plant pathogens by reducing or eliminating the numbers of pathogens at their source. -
ArticlesApple Crop Load Management - A Hand-thinning Gauge
The Equilifruit disc, developed in France, has potential as a hand-thinning gauge in tall spindle apple. -
ArticlesPeach Tree Pruning - Managing Light and Crop Load
Peach trees are pruned to maintain tree size and shape and to help manage light and crop load. -
ArticlesApple PGRs - Prevention of Preharvest Drop in Apple Orchards
As apples mature, they begin to produce large amounts of the ripening hormone, ethylene. One of the ripening processes stimulated by ethylene is stem loosening. -
ArticlesApple Crop Load Management: Chemical Thinning
Chemical thinning applications are probably the most important single spray in a season. -
ArticlesStrawberry Plasticulture Plug Planting: Ways to Increase Chances for Success
The plant material used to make strawberry plug plants is usually well-traveled by the time it gets to your fruit production farm. Chances are it has been in situations where it could "pick up some unwanted things" along the way. -
ArticlesFruit Harvest - Determining Apple Fruit Maturity and Optimal Harvest Date
Whether apple fruits will be sold fresh, stored for wholesale, or sold for processing, estimating optimum harvest dates is critical. -
Tools and AppsOrchard Spray Record-Keeping
Use these spray record-keeping spreadsheets with an Integrated Pest Management plan. Talk to your Extension educator if you need help building them, or view the IPM videos and articles available here.



