As a kid, when Aaron Lerew heard his Uncle John’s apple truck coming, he would run to the side of the road and hitch a ride, spending the rest of the summer day in the orchard. During college, he spent summers working in the orchards. Today, he is the fourth generation to operate Lerew Brothers Orchards.
Together with his uncles and cousins, the 35-year-old father of four cares for more than 700 acres of fruit trees. The orchard is mainly apples: Gala, Honey Crisp, Golden Delicious, Granny Smith, Fuji and Red Delicious.
“I don’t want to do anything else,” says the York Springs, Pennsylvania fruit grower. He explains there is always plenty of work to be done and appreciates how it changes with the seasons. Each spring the family replaces about 30 acres of old trees with new. It only takes two years for the young trees to produce fruit. Throughout the summer they protect the trees from insects, disease…and deer.
“Deer like young trees. They eat the young growth, stunting the tree or killing it all together," Lerew explains.
A few years ago, a doe and two fawns got into a newly planted orchard and within two weeks, they had destroyed 300 trees. Replacing the young trees cost the Lerews more than $10,000. Beyond the financial investment, replanting costs the family time and future fruit production. As a result of these losses, the family began protecting each new orchard of fruit trees by installing 8-foot Bekaert Solidlock® Pro Fixed Knot deer exclusion fence in 2015. “It keeps them out. Now, everywhere we plant a new orchard, we put up exclusion fence,” Lerew says.
There are other ways to protect orchards from deer, but the methods are not sustainable, explains Jim King. Before he and his brother John put up exclusion fence, they hung small bars of soap from their young fruit trees, sprinkled human hair around the base of the trees and sprayed the trees with an odor-based agent… “They all worked for a short time, but they would wear out before the growing season was over – or any time it rained,” explains the Michigan fruit grower and co-owner of King Orchards.
In one season, deer could cost the Kings thousands of dollars. After having an exclusion fence installed, King says he has peace-of-mind. “Deer are rarely a thought anymore. They used to be constantly on my mind.”
Without worrying about deer, King can focus on the family’s bustling retail fruit business that caters to the many locals and tourists who enjoy Lake Michigan each summer and autumn.
Located within three miles of Lake Michigan, the region is perfect for growing cherries, King explains. “The water keeps the temperature warmer in the fall and the predominant west winds blowing off the lake has a warming effect.
This allows our trees a longer time to harden off before winter, so they can withstand colder temperatures that way.”
In the spring, these same winds hold the fruit trees dormant longer, delaying bloom and protecting trees from late frost.
Although winds can provide benefits to fruit trees, they can wreak havoc on modern apple trees. Which is the reason today’s fruit growers trellis their apple trees. “Trellises are a means to support dwarf trees,” Lerew says. “Orchard trees are not the self-supporting trees people plant in their backyard.”
Because each apple is hand-picked, Lerew explains trees are bred to only grow 9-to-12-feet tall. Short trees have shallow root systems. On their farm, trees are planted 3-feet apart and attached to a single-line of high-tensile 12.5 gauge Bekaert smooth trellis wire. Each trellis has multiple wires that run through the row of fruit trees. As the trees grow, crews attach its trunk and branches to the trellis wire every two to three feet.
“About the time our apple trees are ready to harvest, that’s when we have to worry about hurricane-winds,” Lerew says. “We use Bekaert’s high tensile smooth wire because we need the wire to be strong enough to support our trees.”
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