AC3 tnx DAILY CAPITAL JOUENAL, 8ALEM, OEEOON, THTJBSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1911 1WS0M TI E Trees Often Overprunod and There Is Much Danger of Doing Work So That Bearing Capabilities Will Be Seriously Endangered Training Tree to Look Well Not Seal Object Questions Which Must Be Left to Judgment of Per ion Doing Pruning An Article Which Every Fruitgrower Should Bead. BY V. B. GARDNER, (Oregon Experiment Station, Corvallis.) Ask the avorage fruitgrower why he is in the orchard business and he will give you any one of a mimbor. of an swers, depending upon how he inter prets your question. He may tell you he is growing fruit ax a side line, as an avocation; it may be that Ilia health demands that he do outdoor work; pos sibly he was bought up on a fruit farm and thus came more or less naturally into the business. However, regardless of how they got started, most fruit growers are in the business primarily what it will yield In the way of financial returns. The orchard may be a means of affording him a living. We maintain the orchard not primarily for its looks for the addition it makes to the landscape, but for what it can do. Our primary object is to take from it year nfter year the largest possible quantities of fruit of the best possible grades and at tho lowest practicable costs. Jt is because of this that, we cul tivate, fertilize, thin, spray, prune and otherwise care for the trees. This be ing true, the value of any particular orchard operation of practice can bo and should bo measured by the way in which it influences yield, grades and cost of production. If then, we ask tho question "why do we prune t" our answer Is that fun damentally we prune to got more fruit and better fruit, to increase quantity and quality or to lower its cost per box. At this point it may be objected by some that we also prune to secure a certain shaped tree. That, howevor, is a matter of training, and pruning should not be confused with training. Training has to do with the shaping of trees, with making them assume ono form or another. We trim trees with open or close centers; with round spreading or tint tops; with many or few scaffold limbs; with high or low heads. Hero It should be emphasized that training does not bavo to do directly with the functioning, with tho behavior of tho tree. This Is, ot course, far from saying thnt training it not important. A treo trained with an open center may be much better adnpted to a certain soil, a certain slope and a certain amount of humidity than a cloBo-contorod treo of the same vari ety. The revorso may bo true of tho tame variety under an entirely diffore ont set of conditions. But whether in training we secure a good shape or a poor ono for a cortniu variety under our conditions, training has to do pri marily with form, On the other hand wo prune trees to so modify, to so con trol their fruit habits that larger and more regular crops of betto fruit will bo borne. In other words, wa prune to modify function. Broadly speaking, we can control the fruiting habit of fruit trees only in so far as can control their machinery MwldlMWMSillatllWlMlriMtlllMlMMlUMUtSt I M M H 11 M B n II M Don't You Want? One of These I 1 tl 11 n ti 14 M u M 11 C1 tl n N Sherman, Hyde & Co., upright, $30. Estey & Camp, upright, $90. F. G. Leicht, upright, $150. Hinze, upright, oak, $150. Kohlcr & Campbell, upright, $150. King, upright, $175. Cable-Nelson, upright, $200. Steinway & Sons, large upright, $250. One Player, upright, $275. j Four Square Pianos-C0fh S! Your Choice for . . . n tl M M II ri n n M M N M M In order to take advantage of these prices, you must buy before the first of March, as we wish to reduce Stock before taking inventory. AH of these instru ments are in good condition, and some of them show no signs of ever having been used. This Is Your Opportunity Geo. Co n i"i Salem's Old Reliable Music Dealer III for fruit production. The flower is usually regarded as the mechanism that tho plant constructs for the ultimate purpose of fruit and seed formation, but flower formation depends to a very large extent upon the number of flower spurs or, as we call them, fruit spurs, present and upon their behavior, This is practically thl equivalent of saying that the fruit spur is the real machine that the tree builds and through tho operation of which its fruit is manufactured. Possibly ex ception may bo taken to this in tho case of bearing on one-year-old wood, but thin rather extraordinary habit of some varieties (it is understood this discussion pertains only to apples and pears) is not general enough to seri ously conflict with the statements mad a. At any rate tho fruit spur is the mech anism that the tree usually employs in its work of fruit bearing. Without doubt many factors influence the initial development and tho Inter health and vigor and regularity of functioning of fruit spurs. Indeed thero are good rea sons to believe that most of our orchard practices, such as cultivation, fertilisa tion, spraying, tho uso of cover crops, etc., influence them oithor directly or indirectly perhaps mainly indirectly. Pruning, however, has generally been looked upon as a practice, almost as tho practico, through which we directly influence fruit spurs. All fruitgrowors know that they can prune them out and thus rodueo their number. Many bo liove that by this or that pruning prac tice thoy can stimulate their formation, or possibly Increase tholr vigor or uengthen or shorten their, life, etc.; and theso beliefs are founded upon careful observation and experience. To just what extent the existence, the vigor, the henlth, tho length of life and the regularity of bearing of individual fruit spurs aro influenced by definite prun ing practices, such as heading In, thin ning out, summer pinching, etc., is far from being generally understood. In other words, wo realize that pruning influences the fruit spur system of the treo, the fruit-producing machinery of tho treo, but we don't realizo how it Influences it nor to what dogrco. At this point It will be well to con sider what wo really desiro In tho way of fruit spurs on our trees. Looking at the question from tho viewpoint of their fruit spurs, when aro our trees In tho bcBt condition t Do we want the spurs to be many or few In number? large or smnllf long lived or short lived? Hliould wo aim to havo each bear a fruit every year or every two years, or overy four, eight or ten years? Those may seem superflous questions, but investigation will show that they aro not, The trees in some orchards aro full of fruit spurs, those of other orchards aro relatively much fewer in number. Tho individual fruit spur in some orchards average an apple or a i mti mm mmmd mH lab mm m W u n n ii li is n ii n 11 II ti n ti n n ri ii n M ti M 13 It ti ra M C1 11 tl n si 51 U 11 II II II 11 n 14 M M 13 II 11 11 M tl M tl II M m .Pianos pear once every two or three years; those in other orchards average a fruit only once in four or five or six or eight or eve nten years. The average length of life of the fruit spur in some trees may be three or four years, in others thirty or forty years. These are ex tremes, of course, but they represent facts regarding the fruit manufacturing machinory in our orchards. Surely all of these conditions cannot be equally satisfactory. There must be some of theso extremes that are distinctly un desirable. Possibly no extreme is de sirable. What are tho correct answers to the questions that have been asked? If the fruit-spur system of the tree is its mecbanisirl for fruit production then is it reasonable that we should prune (1) to obtain as large a number of fruit spurs as possible, for within certain limits to be mentioned later, the larger the number of fruit manufac turing machines the larger will be their total output. And is it not also reason able that wo should prune (2) to keep the fruit spurs that we once secure in as thrifty, vigorous and healthy condi tion as possible, for the better condi tion a machine is in the better is the product that it will turn out. Pruning Practicos That Encourage. Jv'ow let us ask what are the pruning practices that stimulate and encourage the formation of tho largest possible number of fruit spurs and what are the pruning methods and practices thpt either directly or indirectly limit fruit spur formation. First, it may bo men tioned that not a few fruitgrowers de liberately remove fruit spurs from the scaffold limbs of their troes. Of course many orchardists woulj never permit such pruning in their orchards, but it i far from uncommon. Tho writer ell remembers visiting one orchard ot over 5,0000 largo bearing trees where tho now manager was having this done. Tho idea evidently was that the trees look bettor" when thoy havo perfect ly smooth limbs, their uurfaco ungrok en and unmarred by irregular jagged spurs, Little thought was given to tho fact that immediate and future yields were being reduced, that indeed the part of the treo best able to bear heavily was probably being rendered permanently barren. How many people pruning trees between the ages of two and five years prune with their future bearing habit and bearing surfaces in mind? Probably vory few. To'o many are inclined to think that at that age they aro pruning simply to secure vig orous wood growth and proper shape. At that stage of treo growth these ques tions should bo dominant, but that does not mean that future bearing habit should be entirely lost sight of. Espe cially is this truo when pruning treeB four, five and six years old, If the branches of young treeB are pruned too heavily practically all the buds left are forced into growth. This necessitates severe thinning and severe heading back tho following year; and these two processes kopt up yoar aftor year for threo or four seasons mean that but very few buds that can develop into fruit spurs will bo loft in the lower anil central part of tho tree. It is prob ably good practico to pruno heavily trees that have been set one, two, threo, four and occasionally five yoars. By this heavy pruning wood growth is greatly sitmulated and a large, vigorous tree wi(h good strong framework can bo quickly grown. Put when tho timo nines for the tree to begin to bear tho kind of pruning employed should bo en tirely changed, for nn entirely differ ent type of growth Is wanted. The ener gies of the tree are to be turned into MiuHicr direction, or at least they are to be divided and part of them expend ed for fruit spur and fruit production. In terms of pruning practice this ob ject Is accomplished mainly by compar atively light pruning for at least a couple of years. Vet many orchards that are or have recently reached bear ing age show that tho ono directing their pruning has figured (if.iinleed, he has thought llbeut this particular ques tion at nil) that the an me type of prun ing Hint has been giving him excellent vegetative growth will in some way nlso give him fruit spurs, though other conditions have In no way materially changed. In hardly any other way can tho frequent heavy pruning of trees be tween four and eight or ten years of ii;e be explained. It sometimes seems as though wo hnve a kind of blind faith that our trees will somehow come into bearing without much effort on our part and In spite ot' almost anything we can do to prevent it. Consequently we give little thought to pruning as it really influences bearing habit. Limits Fruit Bearing, What lias just been said regarding the limitation of the number of fruit -puis by severly pruning young trees npplies, with equal force to the severe pruning of bearing trees, In general heavy pruning greatly reduces the number of buds that can develop into fruit spurs, if it does not actually re move many, and also forces a large per rentage of the buds left into vegetative growth, In extreme cases it force well formed and properly functioning fruit spurs into leafy, nun fruiting shoots. It thus limits the fruit bearing surface in four distinct wnj. This is far from stating that heavy pruning l never desirable; but the fact should he emphasised that heavy pruning greatly reduces the amount of the tree's ma liluery for fruit production. The ques tion Is here raised, are not many orchards forced into wood growth year after year by the heavy pruning that ther rocelve, when a lighter pruning, or in extreme cases no pruning at all, would permit the development of much needed fruit spurs? It should be stated here that by "heavy pruning" is meant just what the term implies, whether tho removal of top growth consists in the taking out of a few large limbs or of many smaller ones, whether it con sists in the thinning out or the heading back of branches or of both, whether the interior or the exterior of the tree is sacrificed. It may be that few grow ers pruno heavily as a matter of choice. They possibly think they have to to keep their trees in "good shape," re gardless of what this kind of pruning does to the fruit spurs. At any rate the fact remains that heavy pruning is an exceedingly common orchard prac tice. Prom what has been said it might be inferred that no pruning at will give us the largest possible number of fruit spurs, as the largest possible number of buds are left to grow into spurs and so many Btart that few can develop into purely vegetative shoots. Theoretically at least this is probably more or less true. Practically, however, it is unde sirable to stimulate, or more accurately permit fruit-spur formation to proceed to that extent. This is because we de sire not so much the greatest possible number of fruit spurs in the trees as fruit spurs that healthy, vigorous and in good condition in every way so that they will flower and fruit regularly for many years. Tho health, vigor and longevity of the fruit spur depend upon its food and moisture supply and upon the amount of sunlight it receives. It is possible for a tree to be so situated that there is not enough moisture and food present to supply properly all the spurs and their developing fruits. It is also possible for the upper and outer limbs to be so numerous ami the growth they make so dense that many of the inner and lower branches, with their fruit spurs, receive insufficient; light to keep them thrifty. Lator these shaded spurs die off and tho fruiting area of the tree is thereby reduced. Under theso circumstances judicious pruning would so limit tho number of spurs that thoro would be food and moisture for all, anil tho branches would be so thinned that enough sunlight would filter through the outer and upper part of tho tree to keep the remaining parts growing vigorously. Just as too severe pruning reduces tho number of fruit spurs, too little pruning weakens thorn, reduces their vitality, shortens their life and makes them function irregu larly. Tho problem of the fruitgrower then is to maintain the proper balance between the number of fruit spurs and their health and vigor. He does not desiro so many that some of them die out; ho does not wish for so many that oven though all live most of them bear irregularly. On tho other hand, ho does want as many as the size of the tree and its food and moisture supply can keep alivo and healthy and bearing regularly. Some Questions. Tho question that we may now raise is, how do current pruning practices maintain life and strength and vigor of fruit spurs? How do they influcneo their longevity and tho regularity with which they bear fruits? How do they maintain tho proper balance between number and strength of fruit spurs? Do they allow too many fruit spurs or do they go too far in reducing their numbers? Po they keep tho spurs strong or do they allow many to die? A partial answer has nlready been giv en to this question in discussing the subject of heavy pruning. Though pos sibly a smaller percentage of fruit growers under pnino than over-prune, too little pruning is without question the direct cause of small crops and in terior fruit in many orchards. It. is not necessary to visit a largo number of orchards in onle to find evidence of too light puning. Dead nnd dying fruit spurs are very common, especially on older trees. There may bo loss of fruit spurs from dense shading in over mined trees nnd there will, of course, be a certain loss from other perfectly legitimate causes (a. g., occasional in juries incident to picking) ill very well caied for trees, lint in general the dy ing out of ninny fruit spurs indicates too title pruning. The fact is that an exact balance between number and vigor of fruit spurs, between fruit and wooil I'tU'luctiou in the trees, ennnot be maintained. The est we can do is to maintain an approximate balance, Tho grower often fulls far short of main taining this approximate balance be cause he does not realize that there is a balance to maintain or does not ap preciate its real nntnre. This Is not license ho docs not spend enough time pruning. Ho realizes that it is one of tlui most Important of h.s orchard oper ations. He perhaps studies the prob lem more assiduously than he does any other orchard practice.- However, ho does not approach the problem from the right angle, view it in the right light. He Woks upon pruning as a means of obtaining a tree of a certain form, of a certain type, and bends the bet of his energies toward that end. He uses pruning as a means of modify ing form when it should really be a means of modifying function. Conse quently ho trains his trees instead of pruning them. In training them he may incidentally, or accidentally, prune them, and in the best possible manner, but if so it i more or less a matter of coincidence. Objects of True Pruning.' Thus far su attempt hss been made only to point out the fundamental ob- H J IMJ llcK 1 VJ'3,Vi V jeets of all true pruuing and to present one or two of the principles underly ing pruning operations. Incidentally the inevitable results of too much and of too little pruning have been men tioned. It hardly need be added that the uupruned tree is not necessarily the best pruned tree; the much-pruned treo is not necessarily the best-pruned tree; neither extreme is apt to give the best results. In fact the contrary is most apt to be the case. The practical ques tion at once arises, "how much are we to prune?" From the very nature o? tho question, or rather of the subject with which it deals, no answer can be given which can be taken as a rule to be always followed. It is the principles that have been discussed which underly tree growth and fruit production that determine amount of pruning. Only as these principles are applied to each in dividual problom as it' arises in other words, to each individual tree can the right amount of pruning be done. From what has been said it is evident that proper pruning consists in the removal of just enough wood to afford the largest possible number of fruit Bpurs, a good supply of light and food, and consequently keep them growing vigor ously and ruiting regularly. A tendency on the part of the tree to produce watorsprouts and other wood growth at the expense of fruit spurs indicates that too heavy pruning has already been done. Irregular bearing and dying out of fruit spurs indicates that too little pruning or pruning in the wrong part of the tree, or both, have been faults of recent years. Lighter pruning in the first instance and heavier pruning in the second instance are the correctives. The person who prunes should glanco quickly over tho tree, judge quickly and accurately of the balance (or lack of it) that exists between vegetative growth and fruit bearing surface, and then proceed to restore or maintain this balance. In its 1iat analysis the ques tion of amount of pruning becomes a question of judgment. Iiules cannot be given, or if given they nro nlmost worse than useless. They mislead as often, or more often, than they lead aright. Principles governing amount can be more or less thoroughly understood and then npplied to individual cases. Prin ciples nro always the same. Question of Kind. Pruning Is not only a problem of de gree, of amount, it is a question of kind as well. That is to say, the fruitgrower not only needs to know the principles underlying the amount of pruning to do, but of equal importance is tho ques tion of how that nmount shall be done. Having determined upon the right amount of pruning, shall the grower thin out or head back? If he heads back, shall he head many branches a little or shall he head hack a few se verely? If In' thins out, shall he take out a few large limbs or ninny smaller ones? These questions cannot be con sidered entirely apart from the ques tion of the number of fruit spurs that we desire, or their relative strength, apart from th question of training. Manifestly the thickness and density of growth which Is modified by thinning of one kind or another, bears an important relation to the health and vigor of the fruit spurs, especially those in the lower and cen tral parts of the ree. In general it may be stated that heading in tends to thicken the top, while thinning out, as the term indicates, thins it. Thinning, of course, in addition to reducing the number of actual or potential fruit purs, lets in sunlight and thus tends further to keep the remaining ones healthy and vigorous, heading in, on the other hand, while reducing the number of actual and potential fruit spurs much like thinning out, really tends to afford less light to the spurs on the inner and lower limbs, and thus is apt to redact rather than to increase their vigor nd longevity. Though head ing In acts as a stimulus to the devel-1 opment of buds that are left and thus ISr If1 if f fir M jniill.ni:. 'rmW to, P JcSu. f ilsw i; &JJwajUjiJiiui,.uiawai.m.jj Lots For Sale There are lots of good tobaccos. Good luck to them I But the man who once tries STAG is interested in no other tobacco. He's reached the Promised Land! Convenient Packages: The Handy Half-Sin 5-Csnl Tin, the Full-Size 10-Cent Tin, th Pound and Hilf-Pound Tin Humidort ind tht Pound in one way forces lateral growth thin ning also encourages lateral growth through the removal of branches that would otherwise check it. In other words both practices are a stimulus to fruit spur formation, heading in being tho greater of the two. Of the two, thining is probably the greater aid in increasing the vigor, longevity and reg ularity of bearing of individual fruit spurs. Consequently if it is a greator number of fruit spurs that we need, thinning and heading in should be com bined. If we have enough or too many fruit spurs and wish mainly to increase their vigor, logevity, and regularity of bearnig, thinning is tho practice that we should mainly employ. This is again the equivalent of saying that principles, and not rules, should deter mine the kind of pruning that we should do. Good judgment is as neces sary in deciding between heading in and thinning out as in deciding upon amount of pruning to do. Methods of Training. Though this article does not deal with training, a word is in place regarding the relation of pruning to methods of training. The two Bubjects are quite independent and this fact should be emphasized. The one has to do with form, the other with function. The grower should not confuse the two. Ho should realize that there may be much pruning and very little training; and conversely much training and very little pruning. A tree may be well pruned almost regardless of tho way in MUSTEROLE Loosens Up . Congestion From Colds Just rub it briskly on the chest and throat at night, and get tho soothing relief this clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard gives. Tho old-time mustard plaster used to blister, MUSTEKOLE doesn't. That's why millions aro now using it with Buch comforting results. It breaks up a cold quicker than any mustard plaster you ever saw. Best for Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, Croup, Stiff Xcck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Headache, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Pains ijHIf $2.80 ROUND TRIP To the Meeting of Oregon Development League -AT Eugene, Thursday, February 19 VIA UbUlNltbnAMAI ROUTED "The Exposition Line, 1915." Tickets will be sold from Salem February 18 and 19, and will be good for return until February 20. LOW ROUND TRIP FARES AU Other Point, Call oa nearest S. V. agent for full particulars, train schedules, etc. John M. Scott, Cen'l Passenger Agt, Portland, Ore. a i which it is trained. Te be more spe cific ,the open or the close-centered, tho high or the low headed, tho round or tho flat-topped, the spreading or tho pyramidal tree may bo well pruned or it may be poorly pruned. It is not tho object of this article to minimize tho importance of training or to encourage one type of training over another. Good training is desirable; it means much to the fruitgrower. At tho start he Bhould Btudy carefully tho advan tages and disadvantages of the different systems of training and use his best judgment in deciding upon which one is the best adapted to his variety or varieties as thoy grow naturally undor his conditions. When the system of training is once settled let it remain settled, for if the right system has been selected for a certain set of conditions there will be no reason for changing it. The attention of the grower can then be turned to a study of the few simple principles underlying all pruning and to an application of these prin ciples to the problems that his individ ual trees present. KANSAS PEOGEESSIVE3 MEET. ONITED mESS MU8EU WIUI.l Topeka, Kan., Feb. 12. With defi ance to the Old Guard Republicans as tho keynoto of the meeting, Kansas Progressives mot here today to draft a state and congressional platform. Sev enty Kansas counties were represented at today's convention. and aches of the Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruises, Chil blains, Frosted Feet, Colds of the Chest (it prevents Pneumonia). At your dnigists's, in 25c and 50c jars and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Sold by dnigists everywhere. Accept no substitute. If your druggist cannot supply you send, 25c or 50c to the MCSTER OLE Company,, Cleve lund O., and wo will mail you a jar postpaid jNiiss si. epeors, gradu ate nurso, St. Petersburg, Florida, says: "I have found it excellent for every thing that has to do with colds or rheu matic affections. I am a professional nurse, and this product is hotter than anything I ever saw." THE