
I currently have 2 almond trees that started flowering too but they are younger than yours and not as good looking

Cheers,
Carlos
It is getting a new front (see picture) Because there is not much live vein i have to go slowly.jezz_39 wrote:How much more carving do you intend to do and when will we see it?
Persevereloyskirineba wrote:I currently have 2 almond trees that started flowering too but they are younger than yours and not as good looking
as they are worth it just for the flowering.Steven wrote:How did the almonds go that you planted?
Hi Kirky,KIRKY wrote: by KIRKY » July 12th, 2017, 4:46 pm
Hi bodhi, very impressive Almond. May I ask about the care of this tree. Do you spray at all for things like leaf curl? If so when? When you cut back after flowering how far back do you cut? Is it like the Apricot do you need to cut to a leaf bud?
Last question how often do you repot? Any info would be apreciated.
Any future updates on this tree would be great.
Cheers
Kirky
Yes it does bud back on old wood and i will be cutting it back to every second or third new bud depending on distances between buds. It is an old tree and struggles with its vigour.KIRKY wrote:Thanks bohdi, look forward to seeing it again. How far back do you think you will cut for secondary and tertiary once you start cutting back. Does it bud back on old wood?
Cheers
Kirky
Hi Mike, it is on a graft but a good one. It is a rewarding tree and you should definitely consider having one in your collection. The flowers are worth the effort, oh, and it has slight perfume also. Unfortunately the possums like the nuts.treeman wrote:This is nice bodhi. I didn't read all the entries but is this grafted or on it's own roots? I always wanted to try almond.
Hi bodi, do you know what it is grafted on? Commercially they are generally grafted onto "Nemaguard" peach or a peach/almond hybrid rootstock. Almonds will flower early if on almond stock (or their own roots), later on peach/almond stock and later still on peach rootstock.bodhidharma wrote: Hi Mike, it is on a graft but a good one. It is a rewarding tree and you should definitely consider having one in your collection. The flowers are worth the effort, oh, and it has slight perfume also. Unfortunately the possums like the nuts.
Hi Terry and no, i am sorry, i do not. It is an old tree and collected.terryb wrote:Hi bodi, do you know what it is grafted on? Commercially they are generally grafted onto "Nemaguard" peach or a peach/almond hybrid rootstock. Almonds will flower early if on almond stock (or their own roots), later on peach/almond stock and later still on peach rootstock.