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Fruit trees need good nutrition to grow and produce an abundant harvest, just like vegetables, flowers, and
other plants. In our helpful video, Tricia explains if, when, and how much to fertilize your fruit trees. Or keep
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reading here to learn the 5 Easy Steps for fertilizing your fruit trees!
Not all fruit trees need fertilizer every year and they don’t need it in the same amounts. This can change from
year to year depending on a variety of factors, so be sure to measure annually.
Too much fertilizer will lead to lots of leaves and shoots, and not a lot of fruit. It could even make your
trees weak from too-rapid growth, risking broken branches later in its life.
Too little fertilizer can cause slow growth and under-performance, so you don’t get as much fruit as you
want at harvest time. Not fertilizing fruit trees grown in poor soil can even lead to nutrient deficiencies,
poor health, and trees that are less able to fight off diseases and pests.
Luckily, fruit trees are pretty good at telling you what they need. All you need is a tape measure and a few
minutes of your time. Be sure to take your measurements in the winter or early spring while it is dormant,
before the tree starts growing again for the new season.
First–locate last year’s growth rings. The growth ring is the point on the branch where the tree started
growing in the previous season. The newest growth that you will be measuring is often a different color
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Repeat this step for each of your trees. Even if you have several trees of the same variety and age, they may not
have grown at the same rate and thus have different fertilizer needs. Note–if you have pruned your tree
significantly more than normal, so that you’ve removed over 20% of its canopy within the last year, don’t
fertilize until the next year.
Finally, use this chart to evaluate your tree’s annual growth. If the tree’s growth rate is at the low end of, or
below, annual target growth, then you should fertilize the tree this year. If your tree’s growth rate is at the high
end of, or above, the annual target growth rate, you do not need to fertilize this year (but measure again next
year in case that changes!).
Peaches and nectarines–non-bearing young trees should grow 18"-24", mature bearing trees should
grow 12"-18".
Apples and pears–non-bearing young trees should grow 18"-30", mature bearing pears and non-spur
type apples should grow 12"-18".
Bearing spur apples should grow 6"-10".
Plums and sweet cherries–non-bearing young trees should grow 22"-36", mature bearing trees should
grow 8".
Tart cherries–non-bearing young trees should grow 12"-24", bearing mature trees should grow 8".
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In addition to nitrogen, your tree needs other macro and micronutrients too. Adding compost when you
fertilize is a good way to provide organic matter and trace minerals. Azomite or Cascade Remineralizing
Soil Boost are good sources of trace minerals.
A soil test can tell you whether you need to add more phosphorus, potassium and other nutrients.
More is not always better when it comes to fertilizing your fruit trees. Now that you know that your tree needs
fertilizer, and have picked the perfect fertilizer to use, you’ll need to determine the correct amount to use on
each tree.
For those of us who did not excel in math—fear not—we will walk you through the fertilizer calculations.
The amount of fertilizer you will use is calculated based on the age or size of the tree, and the nitrogen-value on
the package.
Trees need 0.10 pounds of “actual nitrogen” per year of age, or per inch of trunk diameter (measured 1
foot above the ground). The maximum you should give a fruit tree in a year is 1 pound of actual nitrogen.
For example, if your tree has a diameter of 5 inches (or, if your tree is 5 years old), multiply 5 by 0.10
pounds of nitrogen, equals 0.5 lb. This means that the tree will need 0.5 lb of actual nitrogen.
But wait, you’re not done yet! “Actual nitrogen” pounds is not the as simple as just weighing out that
amount of fertilizer, because there is more in a fertilizer than just nitrogen.
The NPK numbers on fertilizer show the percentage of nutrients per pound of fertilizer, not the actual
amount. N, P and K refer to nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium.
For example, if the N listed on the fertilizer package is 7 (meaning 7% nitrogen), such as with E.B. Stone’s
Fruit Tree fertilizer, then there is 0.07 pounds of actual nitrogen for every pound of fertilizer.
To calculate how much fertilizer to apply, divide the amount of actual nitrogen the tree needs by the
amount of actual nitrogen per pound in the fertilizer.
So, using the previous examples, a five-year-old apple tree needs 0.5 lb of nitrogen. The E.B. Stone Fruit
Tree Fertilizer has an N-value of 7 on the package, meaning it has 0.07 lb nitrogen per pound of fertilizer.
Half a pound, or 0.5 lb, divided by 0.07 lb equals 7 lbs. The answer–7 pounds–is the amount of this
fertilizer to apply to the tree.
To help the tree “eat” the fertilizer most efficiently, apply the fertilizer evenly starting a foot away from the
trunk and continue all the way to the “drip line.” The drip line is the perimeter of the tree’s furthest reaching
branches.
The easiest way to do this is simply by spreading the fertilizer on the ground and raking it in.
Digging a series of small holes is another method of applying fertilizer. It is a bit more work, but it best
ensures the fertilizer is getting to the tree roots, especially when using a fertilizer containing less-soluble
nutrients like phosphorus and mycorrhizae.
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Dig the holes six inches down and 12” to 18” apart, throughout the same area as you would have spread
the fertilizer. To make the digging job easy you can use an auger attachment with a cordless drill. Sprinkle
a little bit of fertilizer in each hole until it is used up.
Once you have finished fertilizing, spread an inch-deep layer of compost around the tree and water well.
Resources
For more information on all aspects of fruit trees—selecting and planting a bare root, pruning, controlling pests,
and even how to preserve your harvest—browse our videos and articles in Fruit Tree Central. Some staff-favorite
books on fruit trees are The Home Orchard from UC Davis, along with The Fruit Grower's Bible and Landscaping
With Fruit.
Keep on living the dream with your organic orchard, now that you know when and how to fertilize your fruit
trees.
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37 comments
Lyndsie, you can use any Orchard and Vine or Fruit Tree fertilizer, according to the label.
— Suzanne February 27, 2020
I just bought a house that has a couple cherry trees and a few different citrus trees. What type
of fertilizer would you recommend?
— Lyndsie February 27, 2020
My trees refuse to produce any buds at all. So I cannot do as you suggest and fertilize when they
appear.
— Mrs V Soar July 26, 2019
Arlene, there are several things that may be amiss with your trees. But it really sounds like the
soil is not supplying what your tree’s need for growing a sweet, juicy apple. Have you done a soil
test? I have read that adding trace minerals may help increase the sugar content of your apples.
Azomite is a good all-around fertilizer for providing trace minerals. But rather than shooting in
the dark with fertilizing, a good soil test is a good idea. Once you get your results it will tell you a
lot about what your soil is lacking. If you are giving it fertilizers, give one that has more
phosphorus than nitrogen.
— Suzanne at GrowOrganic.com April 22, 2019
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I have three 7 year old apple trees. Two are Red Delicious and the third is a gala (I think). They
produce plenty of apples every year, but the apples are never very sweet. Even when they start
to drop at harvest they lack sugar. They get sun all day and I keep them watered. I haven’t
fertilized them yet as they are in seemingly healthy soil near a horse pasture and they look quite
healthy. I thin the fruits as required and can get large apples, but they aren’t even worth eating
because of lack of sugars. They are also not very juicy. Help. I haven’t found any articles
anywhere addressing this problem.
— Arlene April 21, 2019
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