The number of peach blossoms is the decisive factor of peach yield. Only flowering peach trees can bear fruit and yield high yield.
However, in the process of peach tree management, it may be due to improper management that peach trees do not bloom or bloom less.
‖ During spring ploughing, at the initial stage of dormancy release and germination of peach trees, the amount of base fertilizer was less, and available nitrogen fertilizer was not used, which led to the lack of nutrition in the trees. Running flowers? !
The management of peach trees has a set of mature management techniques. For peach farmers for many years, there will be no phenomenon that peach trees do not bloom.
First of all, the use of base fertilizer and topdressing is the key to the number of peach blossoms during spring ploughing.
As we all know, peach trees actually need more nutrition than germination.
Therefore, in the spring ploughing season, when the peach tree has just released its dormancy, it is necessary to ensure the nutritional supply of the peach tree.
Under the condition of insufficient nutrition or lack of fertilizer, the bud will shrink into a leaf bud and then develop into a leaf, which is what we call it? Running flowers? Phenomenon.
Running flowers? It is because peach trees lack nutrition that the buds are not enough to further develop and bloom, and the buds will shrink into leaf buds!
During spring ploughing, sufficient base fertilizer must be applied. For peach trees in full fruit stage, if the predicted yield is about 150-200 kg, the amount of base fertilizer (agricultural organic fertilizer) should be 60-80 kg, which can ensure that the peach trees can absorb enough nutrients.
Quick-acting nitrogen fertilizer is also needed for budding, and ammonium bicarbonate is generally used for topdressing. For the same peach tree, the amount of ammonium bicarbonate should be kept at about 0.8- 1 kg.
The reason why peach trees don't bloom may also be improper pruning. Pruning peach trees is a technical job, and improper pruning will lead to less or no flowering of peach trees.
If the peach trees are not pruned properly, there will be too few branches and short branches, but too many branches and long branches.
If you prune like this, there will be fewer buds and fewer flowers. If the leaves flourish and the long branches grow vigorously after spring, they will compete for the nutrients needed by the flower buds, which are already few, and will shrink back into leaf buds or dry up directly.
Therefore, when pruning peach trees, you must have some experience and know which branches to cut and which branches to prune.
Pruning peach trees is a technical job, so I won't go into details here. It just shows that the pruning of peach trees has a great influence on the number of peach blossoms.
The question mentioned by the subject itself is a false proposition. There is no peach tree that doesn't bloom. Even if a peach tree doesn't care at all, the wild peach tree will blossom. But the factors that affect the number of peach blossoms can be analyzed and judged. Combined with the management of peach trees, I think as long as the above two points are done well, the problem of less peach blossoms can be solved.