By Contributing Writer, 4-19-07
White and pink crabapple tree blossoms in spring are a welcome relief to winter’s gray days. But with fewer people making crabapple jelly, many people want crabapple trees solely for their blooms and find the prolific crabapple fruit to be a real nuisance.
In the long run, the easiest way to enjoy the flowers but avoid the fruit is to plant one of the flowering crab cultivars that produce no fruit.
On existing trees, you can prevent fruit from forming with the use of plant hormones. Plant hormones, natural or synthetic, are not pesticides, so they don’t kill anything except the maturing ovaries of the crab apple tree, but you have to be on the ball to apply the right amount of plant hormone at the right time.
One synthetic plant hormone, called naphthalene acetic acid or NAA causes young fruit to abort while doing no harm to the tree or surrounding plants or insects. Follow the concentration recommendations on the label. You also have the choice of using ethephon, a plant growth regulator contained in products sold under such trade names as Florel. It is a compound that readily decomposes to produce the natural plant hormone, ethylene, which interferes with plant growth processes.
Whichever product you use, it’s very important to follow the label directions and spray trees within 10 days after they begin to bloom. If you apply the wrong concentration, or do it at the wrong time, nothing will happen. Timing is everything!
EDITOR’S NOTE; Readers who have questions can drop Moore-Gough a note at hort@montana.edu
Great, just what we need, more synthetic crap to spray in the garden. Just plant "Prairiefire" crabapple, or another variety that holds the fruit well into the winter, when it is happily consumed by robins, cedar waxwings and others. Why resort to chemicals?
We are creating huge problems in the environment with our obsession for the "maintenance free" landscape. A dramatic increase in allergies and asthma has been linked to the preference for male trees and shrubs that produce no messy fruit (but loads of allergenic pollen). We are on the brink of disaster with the disappearance of native and domesticated bees that pollinate many of our food crops, due to habitat loss, pesticides, masses of monoculture lawns, and now possibly cellphone radiation.
Good grief, please don't contribute to this unsustainable attitude here at "New"West.
NAA is rated by the EPA as Category 1 - highly toxic and is also listed on the
Pesticide Action Network (PAN) Bad Actors list of “chemicals that are one or more of the following: highly acutely toxic, cholinesterase inhibitor, known/probable carcinogen, known groundwater pollutant or known reproductive or developmental toxicant.” What a great alternative to those messy crabapples.
Want pretty flowers without fruit or mess? Try silk or plastic and get over trying to make plants into furniture.