The English Apple Man logo

The English Apple Man

Journal

20th Mar 2026 - Fine tuning foliar feeds

DEAR ENGLISH APPLE MAN READERS - I HAVE MADE A BLUNDER, having nearly finished this week's JOURNAL I have accidentally lost all the data from page 2. I am so fed up, I am going to re-write it all for next week's JOURNAL.

 

SO SORRY, It must be OLD AGE!!!!!!!!!

 

Page 1 "to date"

 

The world of foliar feeding has come a long way from the 'far off halcyon days of my youth' back in 1958 when I left school, I remeber Dad swore by application\s of "Bone Meal" applied by hand casting under our apple trees. Then all of or trees (predominately Cox Orange Pippin) were grown as 'Standards - around 25 feet high or 'Bush trees' around 18ft high!

 

Apple trees need a balanced diet of nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus, with nitrogen being the single most important nutrient for both growth and fruit production. How much you feed, and when, depends largely on whether your tree is young and still growing or mature and bearing fruit. A newly planted tree gets as little as half a pound of balanced fertilizer per year, while a full-sized mature tree can handle up to 10 pounds.

 

It was only in the late 1970's that we started growing on the 'Centre Leader' tree - closer planted in the row and circa 8 feet in height.

 

I remember well an old school friend of my Dad (they were both at Judd School in Tonbridge) visiting Dad regularly in that decade, 'playing on their boyhood friendship, while lauding the benefits of MAXICROP - liquid seaweed.

 

Eventually Dad gave in and once used, we were committed to using this foliar feed. The 'proof in the pudding' was when after a very wet winter, in spring as the trees came to life and the fibrous feeding roots were killed off, and very quickly a hot very dry early summer as the young leaves were developing, where Maxicrop had been applied the leaves were green and healthy; where it had not. the leaves were yellow and stressed!

Page 2 EMPTY!!!!