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Are you wondering if you should fertilise your fruit trees in spring?

To understand if it’s a good idea (and what to use), let us tell you how we handle this issue on the farm. But first, you need to understand where fruit trees get their nutrition.

When your fruit trees start to flower and then grow leaves in early spring, they’re using nutrients that were stored away in their buds and bark last autumn.

A bunch of pretty white crabapple flowers in the foreground surrounded by a cluster of upright branches covered in bright green leaves.
Crabapple flowers and leaves in spring

But it’s a pretty limited supply, and as soon as their roots are active, they’ll also start to draw nutrients up through their roots from the soil.

This usually starts happening well before the flowers have turned into fruit.

The base of a young but gnarly fruit tree trunk with the roots exposed. A small shoot is growing upright from the roots next to the trunk.
A fruit tree with the roots exposed

Do you need to give fertiliser to your trees?

So, do you need to add fertiliser to the soil to make sure your fruit trees have enough nutrition available?

Well, no … but yes.

Sorry, confused? When we first delved into the world of growing organically, we learned about something called the “natural fertility system”.

It changed the way we thought about (and used) fertilisers for ever.

The natural fertility system evolved millions of years ago without any human intervention. It works with nature rather than against it.

Most importantly, it doesn’t rely on adding fertilisers to your soil.

A pile of brown woody compost sitting on a green paddock. A pH test kit sits on the compost pile in the foreground.
A pile of woody compost with a pH kit

It turns out that the addition of man-made, artificial fertilisers (which are soluble nutrients) actually works against this naturally evolved system.

Fertilisers can seem to give good results, like better growth. In the beginning, we found it hard to believe that they might be causing damage to the soil.

Hugh standing in front of a compost pile holding a thermometer on a long metal spike that's inserted into the pile to check the internal temperature of the compost pile. A green farm implement is sitting on green grass in the background. The compost pile is at Rodale Institute of organic research.
Hugh checking the temperature of the compost pile at Rodale Institute of organic research

Then we came to understand that the damage occurs at a level you can’t see.

Artificial fertilisers can actually kill or damage soil microbes, rather than supporting them. Fertilisers upset the delicate balance in the soil and can quickly destroy the natural fertility system.

And guess what? That means you become dependent on the fertilisers for nutrition for your crops.

This explains how the great promise of the “green revolution” (when nitrogen fertilisers started to be mass produced) turned out to be a trap for farmers and gardeners all over the world.

The ensuing collapse of the natural fertility system is one of the root causes behind the devastation we’re now seeing in agricultural systems and ecosystems globally.

How to fertilise your fruit trees without doing damage

We were relieved to learn that staying away from fertilisers (and other chemicals) doesn’t mean you can’t (or shouldn’t) add anything to the soil.

We just had to go through a bit of a mindset change. Rather than using fertilisers to feed the trees, we build and feed the soil.

To keep your fruit trees happy and healthy, your job is to make sure that all the required nutrients need are present in the soil.

The next step is to provide the right conditions to favour the populations of healthy soil microbes. This helps them do what they’re good at, which is converting nutrients into a plant-available form (and eating each other!).

Looking into a fruit tree enclosure that's supported by pine poles and covered with black net on top and sides. Inside are rows of young fruit trees, some with blossom on them, the trees are mulched with straw and between the trees is black soil and some green grass.
Fruit trees mulched with straw in spring

So what can you use for organic fertiliser?

At our place, we mainly use compost, wood chips, and compost tea.

You can use basically any organic matter, and from a variety of sources if possible. This might include:

  • compost
  • worm castings
  • wood ash
  • rock dust
  • wood chips
  • straw
  • Charlie Carp (find out more about this product here).

Basically, if something used to be alive, it’s organic matter! Creating healthy soil is an endlessly fascinating and rewarding pursuit for any home gardener.

Freeing yourself from the tyranny of buying expensive fertilisers off the shelf is hugely rewarding for your soil, your spirit, and your wallet!

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