Hawthorn: planting and care

Growing and caring for any kind of hawthorn is so simple that it can be safely planted in areas that are rarely visited. At the same time, the culture will still look attractive. Hawthorn is beautiful from spring to late autumn, it is grown as an ornamental plant. Medicinal properties are recognized by official medicine, berries and flowers are widely used in the treatment of heart disease and as a sedative. Hawthorn fruits are edible. Especially tasty and large berries ripen in garden varieties and North American species.

Hawthorn: tree or shrub

The genus Hawthorn (Crataegus) belongs to the Pink family and is a deciduous (rarely semi-evergreen) small tree or large shrub. The culture is widespread in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere, its range extends from 30⁰ to 60⁰. According to some sources, there are 231 species of hawthorn, according to others - 380. The average life of a plant is 200-300 years, but there are specimens that are more than four centuries old.

The culture grows in places, at least a little lit by the sun - on talus, forest edges, glades, clearings. The hawthorn of various species is found in woodlands and bushes. In the dense shade of densely spaced trees, he will not be able to survive. The relief and composition of the soil has little effect on the hawthorn.

Most often, the culture grows as a short tree 3-5 m high, often forms several trunks about 10 cm in diameter, which makes it look like a bush. Some species, for example, Douglas hawthorn, under favorable conditions reach 10-12 m with a girth of the main shoot up to 50 cm. The crown is dense, densely leafy, round in shape, often asymmetric.

Branches, wood, thorns

On the main trunk and old skeletal branches of the hawthorn, the bark is gray-brown, rough, covered with cracks; in some species it exfoliates. Young shoots are straight or curved in a zigzag pattern, purplish brown, smooth and shiny, depending on the species. Annual growth - the same color or greenish-olive, slightly pubescent.

The hawthorn branches are covered with sparse thorns (short altered shoots). At first they are green and relatively soft, then woody and over time become so hard that they can be used in place of nails. In European species, the thorns are small, may be absent altogether. North American ones are distinguished by spines of 5-6 cm, but this is not the limit, for example, in Arnold's hawthorn they reach a length of 9 cm.But the record holder is Krupnopolyuchkovy - 12 cm.

The wood of the hawthorn is very hard; its small trunk diameter hinders its industrial use.Depending on the species, it can be whitish-pink, reddish, yellow-red. The core is red or black, with a brown tint. On the trunk of an old hawthorn, nodules (burls) can form, the wood of which is of particular value due to the beauty of the color and pattern.

Leaves

In all hawthorns, leaves 3-6 cm long and 2-5 cm wide are arranged spirally on the branches. Depending on the type, their shape can be ovoid or obovate, rhombic, oval, round. Plates - 3-7-bladed or solid. The edge is most often serrate, with large teeth, rarely smooth. Most species of hawthorn shed their stipules early.

The color of the leaves is green, above it is dark, with a bluish bloom, below it is light. They are revealed quite late, in most regions, even the southern ones, not earlier than May. In many autumn hawthorns, the color changes to red, orange, yellow. The leaves of some species fall off green or brown.

Comment! The longer the shoot, the larger the leaves grow on it.

Flowers

If the hawthorn is grown from seeds (and this is the main method of reproduction for all species), it begins to bloom no earlier than 6 years later. The buds bloom at the end of May, when the leaves have not yet fully opened, fly around by mid-June.

White or pink, and in some garden varieties of hawthorn - red, flowers 1-2 cm in diameter have 5 petals. They are located at the ends of short shoots formed in the current year. In different hawthorn species, flowers can be single or collected in complex inflorescences - shields or umbrellas.

The hawthorn with bright pink flowers gathered in shields looks especially beautiful, as you can see in the photo.

Pollination occurs mostly by flies. They flock to the smell of dimethalamine, which some call it similar to stale meat, others - the same as that of rotten fish.

Fruit

The edible hawthorn fruit is often called a berry, but is actually a small apple. The fruit of the same name has nothing to do with it.

Reference! An apple is considered by botanists to be a non-opening fruit with many seeds, ripening in plants of the Apple subfamily, which is part of the Pink family. It is typical for apple, hawthorn, pear, quince, medlar, cotoneaster and mountain ash.

The fruits ripen in September-October. Depending on the type of hawthorn, they are round, elongated, sometimes pear-shaped. Most often, the color of apples is red, orange, sometimes almost black. The seeds are large, triangular, hard, their number ranges from 1 to 5. As shown in the photo, hawthorn from a bush in some species does not crumble even after leaf fall, birds peck it in winter.

Interesting! Hawthorn is a culture that occupies the second place after mountain ash in the winter diet of birds.

The size of the fruit also depends on the species. For example, in the blood-red hawthorn, which is often found in the wild on the territory of Russia, they do not exceed 7 mm. The apples of large-fruited North American species reach 3-4 cm in diameter.

From one adult tree or bush, a crop of 10-50 kg is harvested annually. After ripening, the taste of the fruit is pleasant, sweet, the pulp is mealy.

Comment! Hawthorn is a valuable medicinal crop, in which all parts have medicinal properties, especially flowers and fruits.

Common species of hawthorn in Russia

Russia is home to more than 50 species of hawthorn, about a hundred more have been introduced. They feel quite satisfactory everywhere, except for the tundra. Large-fruited North American species are most often cultivated as an ornamental and fruit plant, but domestic wild hawthorns have great healing properties.

Altaic

Altai hawthorn (Crataegus altaica) is widespread in Central and Central Asia on stony and calcareous soils. It is a protected species. It grows like a tree up to 8 m with smooth branches, grayish-green foliage, white inflorescences and small (up to 2 cm) needles. The first buds of this hawthorn species appear early, at the age of six.Flowering is very short, throughout the week, from late May to early June. Fruits are round, yellow in color, ripening in August.

Arnold

A tree up to 6 m tall Arnold's hawthorn (Crataegus Arnoldiana) reaches its maximum height by 20 years. The species is native to the northeastern United States. The hawthorn forms a rounded crown of medium density, the width and height of which are the same. Oval leaves up to 5 cm in size are green in summer, by autumn they change color to yellow. White buds open in mid-May and fall off by the end of the month. Fruits - red, thorns - 9 cm. The species is highly resistant to frost.

Fan-shaped or Fan-shaped

In North America, in light forests on stony soils, the Fan-shaped hawthorn (Crataegus flabellata) is widespread. It is shade-tolerant, drought and frost-resistant species. Forms a multi-stemmed bush-like tree up to 8 m in size with straight vertical branches dotted with sparse thorns 6 cm long. ...

Daursky

The Daurian hawthorn (Crataegus dahurica) grows in the southeast of Siberia, along the shores of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, in Primorye and Amur, Northern China and Mongolia. It belongs to a protected species, loves chalk soils and well-lit places. Forms a tree or shrub 2-6 m in size with small, elongated, diamond-shaped or oval leaf plates, deeply cut, green, dark on top, light on the bottom. White flowers in cross section of about 15 mm, fruits - red, round, 5-10 mm in diameter. The species is characterized by spikes 2.5 cm in size.

Douglas

The North American species Douglas hawthorn (Crataegus douglasii) grows from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. It is a moisture-loving shade-tolerant plant, resistant to low temperatures, preferring chalk soils.

The tree is 9-12 m in size with dark brown, peeling bark and dark green smooth leaves with little or no thorns. The flowers are white, open in mid-May, crumble until June 10. The color of hawthorn fruits, ripening by August and not exceeding 1 cm in cross section, is from dark red to almost black. The species begins to bloom after 6 years.

Yellow

In the southeastern United States, the Yellow Hawthorn (Crataegus flava) grows on dry sandy slopes. The species forms a tree ranging in size from 4.5 to 6 m, with a trunk girth of up to 25 cm with an asymmetric crown with a diameter of about 6 m. Young branches of hawthorn are green with a reddish tint, adults become dark brown, old ones - grayish brown. Thorns up to 2.5 cm. Leaf plates 2-6 cm long (maximum 7.6 cm on large shoots), in cross-section no more than 5 cm, round or oval, triangular at the petiole are colored light green. Flowers are white, 15-18 mm in size, pear-shaped fruits are orange-brown, up to 16 mm long. The hawthorn ripens in October, the berries of the species crumble quickly.

Green meat

Green-meat hawthorn (Crataegus chlorosarca) often grows as a shrub, rarely - in the form of a tree with a pyramidal leafy crown, reaching a height of 4-6 m. Distributed in Kamchatka, Kuriles, Sakhalin, in Japan. Loves light and chalk soils, high winter hardiness. The leaves are lobed, ovate, with a pointed tip, widening at the petiole. Dense white flowers. The black, tasty, round fruits of this hawthorn have green flesh and ripen in September on plants over 9 years old.

Prickly or common

Hawthorn, Smoothed or Thorny (Crataegus laevigata) is widespread in the wild practically throughout Europe. It forms a bush of 4 m in size or a tree of 5 m with branches covered with thorns and an almost round crown. The species tolerates low temperatures, shade, drought, pruning well, grows slowly. Leaf plates no more than 5 cm in size, 3-5-lobed, obovate, green, dark on top, light on the bottom. This species lives up to 400 years.Flowers are pink, white, 12-15 mm in diameter, collected in 6-12 pieces. Oval or round red fruits up to 1 cm in size ripen in August.

Common hawthorn has many varieties that differ in the color of flowers and fruits, the shape of the leaves. There are terry varieties.

Blood red or Siberian

The most common medicinal species of hawthorn in Russia is Blood Red or Siberian (Crataegus sanguinea). Its range is the entire European part of Russia, Central Asia, the Far East, Western, Eastern Siberia. Protected species, frost-resistant, light-requiring. It is a tree or bush 4-6 m in size. The bark is brown, the shoots are red-brown, the thorns are from 2 to 4 cm. The leaves are not more than 6 cm, 3-7-lobed. Flowers are white in color, united in scutes, open by the end of May and crumble after 10 days. The round red fruits of the species ripen by the end of August at the age of 7 years.

Crimean

The heat-loving species Crimean hawthorn (Crataegus taurica) is an endemic species that grows in the east of the Kerch Peninsula. Differs in hairy cherry shoots with variegated gray-brown bark and sparse thorns about 1 cm in size, sometimes leafy. Forms a tree or bush no more than 4 m. The leaf plates are 3-5-lobed, dense, dark green, covered with hairs, 25-65 mm long. White hawthorn flowers are collected in compact groups of 6-12 pieces. Round fruits of the species are red, up to 15 mm long, most often with two seeds, reach maturity by the end of September - beginning of October.

Round-leaved

Round-leaved hawthorn (Crataegus rotundifolia) is a North American species, bush or tree no more than 6 m high with a dense oval crown. Rounded, dense leaves smooth from above are cut with large teeth. They turn yellow earlier in the fall than any other species. The thorns are green, up to 7 cm in size, turn red in the fall. Flowers are white, up to 2 cm in cross section, grouped in 8-10 pieces, the fruits are red. This drought and frost resistant species is the most resistant to urban conditions and was one of the first introduced into cultivation.

Large anthered or Large spiny

Loves rich chalky soils, humid air and illuminated places American Large-anthered Hawthorn or Large-spiny hawthorn (Crataegus macracantha). The species is fully consistent with its name and is distinguished by 12 cm thorns, densely covering the branches and making the thickets impassable. It is a tree 4.5-6 m in size, rarely - a shrub with an asymmetrical rounded crown. Young branches of the species are zigzag, chestnut, shiny, old ones are gray or gray-brownish. The leaves are broadly oval, dark green, glossy, cut into lobes in the upper part, by autumn they become yellow-red and do not fall off for a long time.

White flowers with a diameter of 2 cm open by the end of May, after 8-10 days they crumble. Large round berries, bright, red, with yellowish flesh ripen at the end of September.

Maksimovich

In open places in Siberia and the Far East, a protected species grows - Maksimovich's hawthorn (Crataegus maximoviczii). It is a tree growing up to 7 m, often in several trunks, which makes it resemble a shrub. Reddish-brown branches, almost devoid of thorns, turn gray-brown with age. Leaves are diamond-shaped or oval, up to 10 cm in size, with well-visible stipules, covered with hairs on both sides. White flowers with a cross section of 1.5 cm are collected in tight shields, open at the end of May, fall off in 6 days. Round red fruits are first covered with fluff, after ripening they become smooth. Full winter hardiness.

Soft

Hawthorn (Crataegus mollis) grows on fertile soils in the valleys of North America. The species is most suitable for industrial timber extraction, the tree reaches 12 m, the trunk girth is 45 cm. Old branches, painted in all shades of gray and covered with small cracks, are arranged horizontally and form a symmetrical, almost round crown.Young shoots are reddish-brown, annual growth is covered with white or brown hairs and convex lenticels. Spines 3-5 cm in size, slightly wrinkled leaves 3-5-lobed, alternate, broadly oval, with a rounded or heart-shaped base, 4 to 12 cm long, 4-10 cm wide.The flowers are large, up to 2.5 cm in cross section, white, open in April-May. By August-September, pear-shaped or round fruits up to 2.5 cm in diameter, fiery red in color, with clearly visible dots ripen.

Softish or Semi-soft

In the northeast and in the central part of North America, the Softish or Semi-soft Hawthorn (Crataegus submollis) grows. The species prefers moist chalky soils, resistant to cold and air pollution. It grows like a tree about 8 m high with a dense umbrella-shaped crown. Old branches are light gray, young ones are green, there are many thorns up to 9 cm in size. The leaves are dark green in color, tender, cut, by autumn they become reddish-brown. Flowers up to 2.5 cm in cross section, appearing after 6 years, are combined in shields of 10-15 pieces. Reddish-orange fruits ripen in September. They are distinguished by good taste and large size - up to 2 cm.

Single-peel or Single-celled

The hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) growing in the Caucasus, in the European part of Russia and Central Asia has many garden varieties.

Interesting! There are many varieties that are more tolerant to low temperatures than the original plant.

The species lives up to 200-300 years, is protected by law, loves well-lit places and is distinguished by average frost resistance. The species is a tree up to 6 m high (rarely about 8-12 m), with a rounded-umbellate, almost symmetrical crown. Leaves are oval or rhombic, up to 3.5 cm long, about 2.5 cm wide. Flowers appear after 6 years, collected in 10-18 pieces, fly around in 16 days. Fruits up to 7 mm in diameter are round, with one stone.

The most decorative varieties with double pink flowers, grown on a trunk.

Peristonized or Chinese

In China, Korea, in the Far East of Russia, the hawthorn (Crataegus pinnatifida), which is sometimes called Chinese, grows. The species prefers bright places, but can put up with light shade, and is resistant to frost. It grows up to 6 m, the old bark is dark gray, the young shoots are green. This species is almost devoid of thorns, it is distinguished by bright green leaves covered with fine hairs. Small flowers are white, turn pink before falling off, collected in 20 pieces. Fruits are shiny, rounded, bright red, up to 17 mm long.

Pontic

A thermophilic protected species, the Pontic hawthorn (Crataegus pontica) grows in the Caucasus and Central Asia, where it rises 800-2000 m into the mountains. Prefers chalky soils, bright spot, tolerates drought and air pollution well. Forms powerful roots, therefore, in the southern regions it is used as a culture that strengthens the slopes.

The species lives up to 150-200 years, grows slowly, does not exceed 6-7 m. The crown is dense, spreading, the leaves are large, bluish-green, 5-7-lobed, pubescent. The flowers are white, appear after 9 years. Fruits with pronounced edges are yellow, ripen in September.

Poyarkova

In the late 70s of the last century, a new species was discovered in Karaganda - Poyarkova's hawthorn (Crataegus pojarkovae). Now in the reserve there are about 200 compact small trees with bluish-green carved leaves. This species is the largest and most drought tolerant of the European hawthorns. Its berries are pear-shaped, yellow.

Point

Point hawthorn (Crataegus punctata) grows from southeastern Canada to the states of Oklahoma and Georgia in the USA on soils formed by rocks, rising to 1800 m.The species forms a tree 7-10 m high with a flat top and low crown, consisting of the horizontal plane of the branches. The bark is gray or orange-brown, spines are numerous, thin, straight, up to 7.5 cm long.

The lower leaves are whole, with a pointed tip, on the upper part of the crown they are serrate, from 2 to 7.5 cm long, 0.5-5 cm wide, gray-green, in autumn they turn red or orange. White flowers with a diameter of 1.5-2 cm are collected in 12-15 pieces. Muffled red round fruits ripening in October, 13-25 mm in size, quickly crumble.

Shportsovy

From the Great Lakes to the north of Florida in America, the range of one of the most famous species, the Shportsevoy hawthorn (Crataegus crus-galli), stretches. The culture owes its name to thorns 7-10 cm long, bent like a rooster's spur. The species grows as a tree or shrub 6-12 m high with a spreading wide crown and drooping branches. Solid, dense leaves with a jagged edge, dark green, 8-10 cm long, turn bright orange or scarlet in autumn.

White large (up to 2 cm) flowers are collected in 15-20 pieces in shields. Fruits ripening at the end of September can have different colors - from white-green to muted red. If they are not pecked by birds, they stay on the tree almost until the end of winter.

Hawthorn in the garden: pros and cons

How the hawthorn blooms can be seen well in the photo. This is an impressive sight, especially in varietal plants. But it is the flowers that make you wonder whether it is worth growing a crop in the garden. Frankly speaking, in all species they do not smell, but stink. You can compare this "aroma" with rotten meat or rotten fish, it will not get better from this. Smells can vary in intensity for different species and varieties.

In addition, the hawthorn is pollinated for the most part by flies, which also does not add to the attractiveness of the culture. But the flowering of all species is impressive in beauty, moreover, it does not last long even for varieties. Then a neat bush or tree pleases with carved foliage until late autumn, and attractive fruits are useful and tasty even in garden forms.

If you grow a hawthorn in a place where the smell will not annoy the inhabitants of the site, then the culture can be called ideal - it almost does not require care, and it retains decorativeness from the moment the buds swell until late autumn.

Important! Hawthorn fruits attract birds to the garden.

How to plant and care for hawthorn

You can just plant a hawthorn and take care of it from time to time - all species are surprisingly unpretentious. Even the varieties do not require much care.

At first, the hawthorn grows very slowly, giving no more than 7-20 cm of growth, then its development is accelerated. Shoots increase during the season by 30-40 cm, and in some species - up to 60 cm. Then the growth rate slows down again.

When to plant hawthorn: in spring or autumn

Planting hawthorns in autumn is preferable in regions with warm and temperate climates. In the north, work is postponed to spring, trying to complete the operation before the start of sap flow. It's not that hard - all species wake up late.

The hawthorn should be planted in the fall after the fall. For novice gardeners, determining the right time is difficult - some species are exposed late. If the hole is dug in advance, this should not cause complications. You can check the readiness of the tree by moving your hand against the direction of growth of the leaves - if they are easily separated from the branches, you can start planting and transplanting.

Important! Container hawthorns are placed in the garden even in summer, but not in the very heat.

Where to plant hawthorn on the site

For hawthorn, you need to choose a sunny place. In a light shade, all species also grow well, but without access to the sun they will not bloom and bear fruit, the crown will become loose, in the fall the leaves will not turn bright colors and will fall off brown.

The best soil for hawthorn is heavy loam, fertile and well-drained. The culture forms a powerful root system, because of this, it cannot be planted in places with a close standing of groundwater without a drainage layer.

Hawthorn tolerates air pollution and wind well. It can be planted to protect other plants and as a hedge.

Selection and preparation of hawthorn seedlings

Best of all, two-year-old hawthorn seedlings of any kind take root. Their bark must correspond to the description of the species or variety, be elastic and intact. The root system of hawthorn is well developed, if it is small and weak, it is better to refuse to buy a seedling.

The dug out plants should be soaked with the addition of a rooting stimulant for at least 6 hours.You can keep the root in water for several days, but then a handful of complex fertilizers are poured into the liquid in order to reduce the harm from washing out nutrients.

Container plants are simply watered the day before planting. But the hawthorn, dug out with an earthen clod and lined with burlap, should be placed in the garden as soon as possible. If this is not possible, the soil and fabric are slightly moistened, and the crown is regularly sprayed.

At what distance to plant hawthorn

If the hawthorn is planted in a hedge, the bushes or saplings should be close to each other to quickly form an impenetrable wall. They are placed at a distance of 50 cm from each other.

When planting a hawthorn alone, you need to focus on the size of an adult specimen. After all, different species can stretch only 2-3 m, or become giants (as for a garden plot) 12 m high, as well as the width of the crown.

Important! When growing a large-fruited garden hawthorn, it is necessary to take into account the size of the variety, and not the species from which it is obtained.

The higher the bush or tree and the wider its crown spreads, the greater the distance between individual plants should be. Usually, for species grown in the garden, an interval of 2 m is observed.

Planting algorithm

A planting hole for a hawthorn must be dug in advance so that the soil has time to sink. It is made a little wider than the diameter of the root system and deep to put drainage. The layer of broken brick, expanded clay, crushed stone or gravel should be the larger, the closer the groundwater lies, but not less than 15 cm. The drainage layer is covered with sand.

Since the hawthorn loves heavy fertile soils, rich in chalk, clay is added to light soils, the poor improve with compost, leaf (and not animal) humus. To adapt the acidity to the requirements of the culture, chalk or lime, if any, pieces of shell rock and ash are mixed.

The planting pit is completely filled with water and settled for at least 2 weeks. Ideally, it is prepared for planting in spring and autumn, and vice versa.

Then a hawthorn is placed in the center of the pit, covered with prepared soil mixture, carefully tamped, watered abundantly and mulched. The root collar must remain level with the ground.

At first, the plant is watered 2 times a week, and if the hawthorn was planted in spring, it is shaded.

How to transplant hawthorn

It is possible to transplant the hawthorn to another place only for the first 5 years, but it is better not to do this either, but immediately think carefully about where to place the culture. The plant has a powerful root that goes deep into the ground. It is impossible to dig up a tree or bush without damaging it; in any case, the hawthorn stops growing after transplantation and is sick for a long time.

It is better to move the culture to another place at the end of the season, regardless of the region. This is done as soon as the heat subsides, even in a leafy state. The hawthorn is dug up and, together with a clod of earth, is immediately transferred to a new place, where it is planted at the same depth as before, and is strongly cut off.

Important! If the hawthorn has managed to bloom, it is better not to replant it. The probability that the plant will take root in a new place is low.

Hawthorn care

Hawthorn requires minimal maintenance. The culture is unpretentious and is able to maintain decorativeness even under seemingly unfavorable growing conditions. Planting and caring for large-fruited hawthorn from North America and its varieties differs little from the agricultural technology of local species.

Pruning hawthorn in spring and autumn

It is best to prune the hawthorn in the spring before the sap begins to move. All dry, broken branches that thicken the crown and spoil the appearance of the plant are removed. Often the hawthorn is not pruned at all. In any case, no more than a third of the shoots can be removed at a time.

More careful pruning requires hedges that cut rather than freely grow. To do this, use cordless garden shears or hand-held, with wavy blades.

You should also carefully approach the pruning of the hawthorn, from which the standard tree was made. It may need to be trimmed throughout the growing season.

Important! When transplanting, hawthorns need strong pruning.

How to fertilize hawthorn

Hawthorn is not too picky about feeding, it makes no sense to buy special fertilizers for it. In the spring, at the beginning of the formation of buds, it can be given mullein infusion. In late summer or early autumn, a phosphorus-potassium fertilizer that does not contain nitrogen will be useful. It will help the wood ripen, the flower buds of the next year to form and survive the winter.

Watering, mulching

In temperate climates, if it rains heavily at least once a month, the hawthorn may not be moistened. In the south, once every 2 weeks, the bush is poured 10 liters of water for every 1.5 m of growth (this is how the minimum watering of deciduous crops is calculated). If the temperature is 30⁰C and higher, this may not be enough. Watering is carried out weekly.

Important! The soil requires the greatest moisture when pouring berries of large-fruited species. If there is a lack of water, the apples will become small, dry, wrinkled and tasteless.

Mulching will protect the root from overheating and the soil from drying out. It also won't give weeds break through to the surface, and replace loosening the soil for mature plants.

Preparing for winter

In fact, most species of hawthorn do not require any shelter for the winter. Light protection may be required only in the first year after planting, and even then not so much from frost as from sunburn and strong winds.

All preparation for the winter of an adult plant consists in the autumn moisture charging and feeding at the end of summer with potassium-phosphorus fertilizers. In a grafted hawthorn, you need to protect the operation site by simply tying it with warm cloth or straw.

It is better not to plant heat-loving species, such as Crimean hawthorn or Pontic hawthorn in the North. There are many forms with full winter hardiness, no less beautiful than those indicated.

It is better for gardeners to spend 5 minutes and find out what species grow in their area without problems than to spend energy on building a shelter. Interestingly, Thorny (Common) and Monopestile hawthorns, which have many decorative varieties, grow well in cold regions.

What year after planting does the hawthorn bear fruit?

When the hawthorn begins to bloom and bear fruit depends on the species. This usually happens no earlier than 6-7 years after planting. There are species that begin to form buds for 10-15 years.

Interesting! Large-fruited hawthorns bloom much earlier than those with small berries.

First of all, the first crop is the hawthorn Periston cut, which is sometimes called Chinese. Grafted specimens can bloom at 3-4 years of age.

Even hawthorns of the same species can bloom with a difference of 1-2 years. Gardeners noticed a pattern - the larger the crown of the plant, the earlier fruiting begins.

Why hawthorn does not bear fruit: possible causes

The main reason for the lack of fruiting in hawthorns is that the tree has not reached the required age. Among others, it should be noted:

  • lack of sunlight;
  • strong pruning - fruits are formed on the periphery, and not inside the bush.

If the hawthorn is blooming but not bearing fruit, you should put sugar and water next to it to attract insects. It will be useful to plant another bush on the site - although the culture does not require pollinators, in their presence it forms more ovaries.

Important! Tips such as pruning the bark for an early harvest, or somehow injuring the tree, are best left unaddressed.

Hawthorn diseases: photos and fight against them

Unfortunately, no matter how wonderful and unpretentious the hawthorn crop is, it is affected by the same diseases and pests as most fruit crops. Measures to combat them are also the same.

Among the diseases should be highlighted:

  • powdery mildew manifested in a white bloom on the leaves;
  • rust for which the hawthorn acts as an intermediate host, from it the disease spreads to the conifers;
  • leaf spots, oppressive plants and early leaf fall;
  • phyllostictosis, expressed in the appearance of yellow spots, merging over time;
  • phomosis, striking young shoots;
  • leaf rot resulting from regular waterlogging.

Fight disease with fungicides.

The most common hawthorn pests:

  • green apple aphid sucks juice from young leaves and shoots;
  • leaf roll lays eggs in the bark, and its caterpillars destroy hawthorn leaves;
  • fruit weevils, eating buds in spring, and laying eggs in the ovary in summer;
  • hawthorn, caterpillars which eat buds and leaves.

To get rid of insects, use appropriate insecticides.

To make the hawthorn less sick and affected by pests, one must not forget to carry out sanitary pruning and preventive treatments of plants in spring and autumn with Bordeaux liquid. You should also remove plant residues from the site at the end of the growing season.

Conclusion

Growing and caring for hawthorns is not difficult. It is important to correctly place the culture on the site, and then only maintain its vital activity. How to do this without causing yourself unnecessary worries, the video will tell you:

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