The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Little can be done to prevent early blooming

- Walter Reeves

Q: I have several Elberta peach trees that are growing like crazy but they want to bloom in January. I read that mulching them would keep the soil cold to slow blooming. John Mason, email

A: The air temperatur­e around trees is what triggers them to bloom. Peaches require a varying number of hours below 45 degrees to be ready to bloom. Are you sure you have Elberta peaches? This variety requires 850 chill hours before blooming, and early blooming is not usually that much of a problem. “Lowchill” peach varieties have a terrible time producing in North Georgia because of their tendency to bloom early.

The Elberta peach has a storied history in Georgia. It was grown here by Samuel H. Rumph in the early 1800s. In the next decades the peach became famous for its ability to be shipped to New York and still taste great.

Q: I walk at night in North Georgia in the winter and there’s a sweet smell that I initially thought was someone’s laundry but I realize it must be a plant. Could it be elaeagnus? Sylvia Brophy, email

A: A couple of candidates come to mind: winter honeysuckl­e, Lonicera fragrantis­sima, blooms off and on through January. Fortune’s tea olive, Osmanthus x fortunei, smells great but you probably won’t notice the small flowers from which the fragrance comes. Your theory of eleagnus, Eleagnus

pungens, is also a possibilit­y for nighttime perfume.

Q: I’m in the planning phase of starting a large Dunstan chestnut orchard. Is there anyone to help me in the process? One issue I need to address is irrigation. Bobby Stephens, Athens

A: Few people alive remember the billions of American chestnut trees that were wiped out by chestnut blight in a few decades after 1909. The nuts were delicious to humans and wildlife, the wood was valuable for constructi­on and furniture, and the tree supported a huge ecological niche. The American Chestnut Foundation (acf.org) is working to cross American chestnut with other chestnut species with the goal of producing geneticall­y diverse, nearly pure American chestnut stock. The blight resistant ’Dunstan’ chestnut is one result of their efforts. The American Chestnut Cooperator­s’ Foundation (accf-online. org) is cross-breeding surviving American chestnut trees to each other to bring about disease resistance. Researcher­s at the State University of New York have developed a diseaseres­istant American chestnut by genetic modificati­on, inserting a wheat gene that defeats the chestnut blight fungus. Like any GM organism, these trees are tightly regulated and will not be on the commercial market anytime soon.

Neither the Georgia Department of Agricultur­e nor the University of Georgia have developed much informatio­n to assist people who want to grow chestnuts. But there is considerab­le research on growing pecans in Georgia. Here is a link to great informatio­n on using drip irrigation on pecan trees: bit.ly/pecandrip.

Listen to Walter Reeves Saturday mornings on News 95.5 FM and AM750 WSB. Visit his website, www.walterreev­es.com, follow him on Twitter @walterreev­es, on Pinterest, or join his Facebook Fan Page at bit.ly/georgiagar­dener for more garden tips.

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