Canopy management young tree canopy management – a broad acre perspective - scott norval
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Transcript of Canopy management young tree canopy management – a broad acre perspective - scott norval
Young Tree Canopy
Management
Maccmanagement Pty Ltd
3 farms managed in the Bundaberg region
Company started in 2005 first trees planted in June 2006
2 Orchards developed from scratch – originally Sugar cane and small crop farms
Majority of trees planted in 2007, first crop in 2010 with this years crop approximately 200tn
40,125 trees planted at 8 x 4
Varieties include: 816, A203,741,660,Daddow,344,246,A268
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32,375 trees planted at 8 x 4
Varieties include: 816,741,Daddow,A16
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Farm Prep and Planting
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Hand Pruning Young Trees
• Main Structure based on
a central leader
• Strong lateral branches
• Narrow crotch angles
removed
• Less prone to wind
damage
• More open tree at
maturity
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Primary purpose is
to develop a strong
well balanced
framework for future
growth
Narrow Crutch Angle
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Inward growing branches
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Hand Pruning Young Trees
• Manual work carried out
with secateurs
• Average cost to prune
(Young trees sub 2 year
age) $0.12 per tree per
round
• Good worker doing 120
to 140 trees per hour or
1000 trees per day
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Hand Pruning Young Trees - The good
• Effective in reducing wind
damage to young trees
• Good structure formed
and held in some
varieties – 741, 660, 344
and 246
• More open tree reduced
pest pressure – Twig
Girdler
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Hand Pruning Young Trees - The bad
• Reduction in early yields when
compared with other methods
• Hard to source required volume
of labour – job requires training
• Lack of labour meant frequency
of pruning over 75000 trees
was not high enough and led to
too much foliage being
removed each round slowing
tree growth
• Some varieties just not suited –
A203
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Mechanical Pruning
• To promote branching and increase early yield
• To control canopy size to minimise wind damage
• Skirting of trees to allow access for harvesting
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Mechanical Pruning
• F.A.M.A. 3 bladed pruner used
• Cuts skirt, side and top at same
time. Two passes per tree
• Average cost $0.20 per tree
(Includes depreciation and
direct costs)
• Approx. 200 trees per hour
average
• Pruned at an interval to promote
branching every 30cm
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Mechanical Pruning - The Good
• Effective protection from wind damage
• Increased yield in year 3,4 and 5
• Low capital cost – pruner sits on old tractor and is used
whenever time allows
• Atypical tree shape maintained by pruning to point.
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Mechanical Pruning - The Bad
• Low tractor speed, two
passes per tree
• Increased density of
trees as they mature
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Conclusions
Hand Pruning
- Effective on some
varieties
- Hard to source
competent labour on a
large scale
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Mechanical Pruning
- Relatively fast and cheap
- Increased early yields