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The 2021 Honeycrisp Playbook: Apogee at Pink for Bitter Pit Suppression

Dan Donahue, Tree Fruit Specialist
Eastern New York Commercial Horticulture

April 19, 2021

The 2021 Honeycrisp Playbook:  Apogee (Prohexadione calcium) at Pink for Bitter Pit Suppression.

Daniel Donahue, CCE-ENYCHP, Hudson Valley New York

"Effective Bitter Pit suppression in Honeycrisp involves the deployment of a number of tactics over the course of the growing season, there is no silver bullet, no trick play to save the game, think of it like following a playbook in football, three yards and a cloud of dust."

  •  For BP suppression, Apogee should be applied to mature bearing tall spindle Honeycrisp (HC) at pink stage at a rate of 6 oz./A. Cover the foliage well.  Apply at full or late pink, not early pink.  Use a water conditioner, "hard" water deactivates Apogee.
  • New for 2021:  Temperature at application and during the 8-hours post is a critical factor.  Prohexadione calcium (Apogee, Kudo) are plant growth regulators and require metabolic activity within the plant for uptake and metabolism.  Temperatures below the mid-60's are questionable for an application timed at pink.  Delay your application until temperatures are warm enough for up to eight hours post.  In the Lower Hudson Valley that may be next Saturday or Sunday, and later than that as you move north.  Of course, the forecast could (will) change.
  • New for 2021:  Reviewing our 5-years of data in ENY and 2-years statewide, its clear that Honeycrisp bitter pit management recommendations need to take the rootstock into account.  Our detailed survey data from ENY 2016-2018 clearly demonstrates that HC fruit produced on the B.9 rootstock will have on average substantially less bitter pit (11%) than fruit produced on the M.9 clones ( 25%), M.26 (  30%) after 120 days of regular storage.  In a 2020 trial, after 74 days of regular storage, G.41 expressed 22% BP vs 10% for M.9.  Our team found substantial variability between blocks by site, region, and year, which is one reason why BP prediction and mitigation have been such a challenge over the last, say, 150 years?.  For 2021, I am recommending not to include B.9 Honeycrisp blocks in your pink Apogee program. For BP suppression.  B.9 HC fruit already have a low probability of BP symptom expression, and the low-vigor characteristics of the combination result in a tree that can have trouble filling its allotted space.  Prohexadione calcium formulations (Apogee, Kudos) applied at pink will suppress vegetative growth to some degree, so if not needed, don't use it.
  • To avoid aggravating BP in Honeycrisp, do not use Apogee (prohexadione calcium) for vegetative growth reduction post-bloom as is generally recommended.  Our data shows that in 2 years out of 3, "conventional" Apogee use significantly aggravated BP.  Contrary to commonly held belief, our data over three years indicates that the reduction of vegetative growth achieved by Apogee is not correlated with a reduction of BP incidence. 
  •  If fire blight is a problem, there are real benefits to using Apogee to suppress shoot infections, in this case, you must pick your poison as they say.  However, the single pink application timing on its own will help suppress FB infections.  Follow an aggressive blossom blight protection program, use the NEWA models and deploy other tools such as ASR materials to help.  Specifically for HC, reserve post-pink Prohexadione calcium applications as an FB suppression measure of last resort.  For example, if you have cankers from prior seasons, or active shoot blight infections, or perhaps concern over hail damage prior to terminal shoot set.
  • Can I include foliar calcium in my Apogee tank mix?  Generally not because calcium in solution (i.e. hard water) will deactivate the Prohexadione calcium.  However, there is an exception!  The Agro-K company produces a foliar calcium product Sysstem-CAL™ which has been tested and shown to be compatible with Prohexadione calcium formulations (Apogee, Kudos) in tank-mix combinations.  Follow the link here for more details.  I will be discussing foliar calcium applications in the next installment of the 2021 Honeycrisp Playbook. 
  • Leave a trellis panel unsprayed as a control.  Sample 100 apples from the control trees, and 100 apples from the treated trees, and hold in regular storage for 60 days.  If you really want to push the envelope, pre-condition at 50F for 7 days as pre-conditioning aggravates bitter pit.  Taking a sample like this is necessary for accurate on-farm evaluation.  This is also true of your calcium applications.  BP evaluations by "eyeball" at harvest, on-the-tree or in-the-bin, or even off the packing line are not reliable due to sampling bias and the fact that BP symptoms will visibly express at different timings depending on the year, site, and rootstock. 
  • A single application of Prohexadione calcium (Apogee, Kudos) at pink will result in a degree of vegetative growth reduction.  Therefore, do not apply Apogee at pink for BP suppression to young-bearing orchards that haven't filled their allotted space.  Use  POMA,  Sysstem-CAL , CorClear, or a similar foliar calcium program in young bearing orchards. 
  • Want to know more?  Read this article from the March 2019 issue of CCE-ENYCHP Tree Fruit News, or contact Dan Donahue, CCE-ENYCHP Regional Tree Fruit Specialist at 518-322-7812 or djd13@cornell.edu.


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Upcoming Events

Wine Sensory Evaluation Workshop

April 26, 2024 : Wine Sensory Evaluation Workshop
Staatsburg, NY

In collaboration with Jeremy Schuster, Viticulture Specialist at the ENYCHP, Dr. Anna Katharine Mansfield and Chris Gerling, Enology Extension Specialists with the Cornell Craft Beverage Institute, will be presenting a wine production-focused, interactive workshop on sensory evaluation. 

View Wine Sensory Evaluation Workshop Details

Announcements

2023 Spotted Wing Drosophila Monitoring/Management

All berry farmers are watching for monitoring reports that indicate Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD) adults are in their region. Mid-season berry crops should be sprayed as soon as berries begin to ripen unless you've elected to use insect exclusion netting.

- For general information about SWD, and to enroll for free monitoring reports, visit the Cornell SWD blog https://blogs.cornell.edu/swd1/.
- Click here for the 2023 Quick Guide for Pesticide Management. 
- For some great instructional videos and fact sheets on insect exclusion netting, visit the University of Vermont's Ag Engineering blog.


Resources from CCE ENYCHP!

We are developing new ways to connect with the CCE ENYCHP team this year! We have a Youtube page located at this link. Check out videos on Table Grape Production, Pest Updates and the 20 Minute Ag Manager - in 4 Minutes series

We have a Facebook Page here as well as an Instagram page. We keep these places updated with current projects, events, and other interesting articles and deadlines.

There are also text alerts available. Fruit and vegetable farmers in 17 Eastern NY counties can now receive real time alerts on high risk disease and pest outbreaks texted directly to their cell phone. The Eastern NY Commercial Horticulture program, which is supported by local Cornell Cooperative Extension associations, will now offer text alerts to those that enroll in our program in 2019. 

The text alerts will be reserved for important crop alerts that could impact management decisions immediately. For instance, if there were an outbreak of Late Blight in the area, this would be transmitted to vegetable growers.

Farmers can choose the crop for which they wish to receive updates. Additionally they can request that Ag Business Alerts be sent to them. These alerts might include due dates for crop insurance deadlines, market opportunities etc.

If you have questions, please contact enychp@cornell.edu


Podcasts

Winter Greens Grower Interviews in Northern New York

October 22, 2022
In this episode, vegetable specialist Elisabeth Hodgdon interviews Lindsey Pashow, ag business development and marketing specialist with the Cornell Cooperative Extension Harvest New York team. They discuss findings from a series of interviews with winter greens producers in northern New York. Lindsey shares production and marketing challenges associated with growing winter greens in this cold and rural part of the state, success stories and advice from growers, and tips for those interested in adding new crop enterprises to their operation.

Funding for this project was provided by the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program. The episode was edited by Miles Todaro of the ENYCHP team.

Resources:
• Crop enterprise budget resources available from Penn State Extension (field and tunnel vegetables: https://extension.psu.edu/small-scale-field-grown-and-season-extension-budgets), UMass Extension (winter spinach budgets: https://ag.umass.edu/vegetable/outreach-project/improving-production-yield-of-winter-greens-in-northeast and field vegetables: https://ag.umass.edu/vegetable/fact-sheets/crop-production-budgets), and Cornell Cooperative Extension (high tunnel vegetables: https://blogs.cornell.edu/hightunnels/economics/sample-budgets-spreadsheets/). Use these budgets as templates when developing your own crop enterprise budget.
• The Organic Farmer’s Business Handbook, by Richard Wiswall
• The Winter Harvest Handbook, by Eliot Coleman

For questions about the winter greens project discussed in this podcast, reach out to Lindsey Pashow (lep67@cornell.edu) or Elisabeth Hodgdon(eh528@cornell.edu).

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