Interesting. I have a granny Smith apples at home that I take apples up to my place in Northern Wisconsin and they devour them. You must have some picky spoiled deer. Do you have other apples near there that they the do eat ?I have both AR Black and Granny Smith. Last year, the coons got every apple. Year before last, a few apples of both species fell to the ground - and deer didnt touch a one.
They sure like my Honeycrisps. Burns my bottom every time my trail camera shows them eating $4 apples.Just wondering has anybody actually noticed a deer preferring one apple type over another if they drop at the same time. It seems to me they will scarf down what ever apple or crab is there.
I have 2 peach trees. Not sure what kind but one has yellow flesh and one has white flesh. The white fruit peach is the best peach I've ever had. The Japanese beetles won't touch the white fruit but the yellow they are all over.They sure like my Honeycrisps. Burns my bottom every time my trail camera shows them eating $4 apples.
But to answer your question, as far as I can tell, a deer's favorite apple is the one they can reach. Jap beetles have more refined tastebuds than deer do
They dont know what an apple is. Almost nobody grows them here. My deer would not even eat purple hull pea vines or sweet potato vines for a couple years - now you cant plant them because they devour themInteresting. I have a granny Smith apples at home that I take apples up to my place in Northern Wisconsin and they devour them. You must have some picky spoiled deer. Do you have other apples near there that they the do eat ?
Got big japanese beetle issues here. Whats ones do they avoid? Got a prefered control method? Really thinking I need nastier stuff than bonide. Didn't notice much difference last year.They sure like my Honeycrisps. Burns my bottom every time my trail camera shows them eating $4 apples.
But to answer your question, as far as I can tell, a deer's favorite apple is the one they can reach. Jap beetles have more refined tastebuds than deer do
Same here....planted two Lowe's Granny Smith Apple trees in the front yard probably a year or two after moving here. So I'd estimate they are 17-18 years old and the deer devour them as well. Just planted a Liberty and two Enterprise apples in the vicinity of the Granny Smith's this spring, so it'll be a while before I can see if the deer have a preference .Interesting. I have a granny Smith apples at home that I take apples up to my place in Northern Wisconsin and they devour them. You must have some picky spoiled deer. Do you have other apples near there that they the do eat ?
They definitely have preferences when given a choice ... and maybe like people they each prefer something different - and... depending on how hungry they are and what time of year it is.... When there are lots of apples on the ground they can be fussier, they are true samplers - nibblers here and there.
So I go with the ":variety is the spice of life" theory - give them a little of everything, I let them make the choice and not worry about it. I could be better at optimizing drop times and stand locations but if your planting and pruning your not hunting, seems like I have less time to hunt with every additional tree I plant.
The common denominator I have found if all things are equal which they rarely are but ... the sweeter the better, I think sweeter apples may also have a stronger aroma which may help draw them into the apples.
I don't understand your logic when you say "If your planting and pruning your not hunting , seems like I have less time to hunt with every additional tree I plant" .They definitely have preferences when given a choice ... and maybe like people they each prefer something different - and... depending on how hungry they are and what time of year it is.... When there are lots of apples on the ground they can be fussier, they are true samplers - nibblers here and there.
So I go with the ":variety is the spice of life" theory - give them a little of everything, I let them make the choice and not worry about it. I could be better at optimizing drop times and stand locations but if your planting and pruning your not hunting, seems like I have less time to hunt with every additional tree I plant.
The common denominator I have found if all things are equal which they rarely are but ... the sweeter the better, I think sweeter apples may also have a stronger aroma which may help draw them into the apples.
We’re the deer stumbling around after eating those fermented crabs?A cousin and I raked up a bushel of dime-sized crab apples from a roadside tree, and put them out behind his house just to see if deer would go after the tart little things. They didn't at first, but after a couple days, they turned "cider-y-smelling" and the deer cleaned up every one. They were originally so tart, we didn't think deer would even bother with them.
Its just a Joke statement, with the twist of reality for those of us that have planted and grafted more trees than we need...... Some of us here have become addicted to grafting, planting and so on; which has resulted in an abundance of pruning needs, needs that are almost impossible to keep up with. There are likely 300+ or so fruit trees on my property that need care.I don't understand your logic when you say "If your planting and pruning your not hunting , seems like I have less time to hunt with every additional tree I plant" .
I plant trees in the spring and water my trees once or twice a week and check for bugs through the 1 st week of Oct. . Once Bow Season starts the 1 st Sat in Oct ,the trees are on their own, I stay out of my tree plot (caring for trees) from 1 st Sat in Oct until 2nd week of Jan when late season hunting ends. Then do any pruning in Jan / Feb or early March . If YOU CHOOSE to plant / prune DURING hunting season that's on you... If you plant in the spring and prune in the winter after the seasons over....it wont take a single minute away from your hunting time...
Possibly. If they got tipsy from their first taste - they certainly kept coming back!!! Not one was left on the ground, so we went back to rake up more the next week. That was some years ago - but the lesson was learned ........... tart, small crab apples will get eaten. The small-fruited crabs we planted about 25 years ago at camp have been feeding deer & turkeys since they first bore fruit.We’re the deer stumbling around after eating those fermented crabs?