The Great Willamette Valley Ice Storm of '16 - 10 - Fruit Trees - 9 original photossteemCreated with Sketch.

in #nature7 years ago (edited)

A big ice storm can be good for a fruit tree. And icicles reveal some secrets about the storm, too. Come into my post and see!

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Here's the first post on the Great Willamette Valley Ice Storm of 2016. I've already shown the effect of the ice on my Sequoia and Larch Trees; Blue Spruce and Western Redcedar Trees; Noble Fir, Grand Fir, and Eastern White Pine Trees; two sets of Douglas-Firs, Ponderosa Pines, Hazel, Walnut, Birch, Holly, and Elm Trees, and Garden Plants. I'll be posting only one more ice storm photoset. And then we'll have an ice storm party!


I've got more than 40 fruit trees here at Haphazard Homestead. Don't worry - I'm not including photos of every one in this post - yikes! Instead, I want to focus on three topics -- the icicles, the tree branches, and the little flower buds waiting for spring.

1. A Quick of Ice

This ice storm made some long icicles -- and it made them quickly, too. How can I tell? Look at all the bubbles in those icicles. Rain has a lot of air dissolved in it, because little raindrops have a lot of surface area exposed to the air. And cold water holds the most dissolved air, way more than warm water, like summer rain. But when water freezes into ice, the air gets released from the water, all of a sudden. That's because the solubility of air in ice is so much lower than in liquid water.

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These icicles did not build up by slowly by adding layers to a tiny icicle. No -- these icicles froze from the outside into the center. The air was colder than the rain, so water dripping off the branches was coldest on the outside of each drip. When the water in the middle of the drip finally froze, the air didn't have anywhere to go. It was stuck in the middle of the icicle.

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If you want to see how seriously some folks take the science of icicle growth, here's an article in the Journal of Glaciology.



2. A Tangle of Branches

This big ice storm happened in mid-December. That's way before I prune my fruit trees. So the icicles had a lot of branches to hang from! But none of the fruit trees were bothered by the weight of the ice. After all, they have to hold some hefty loads of fruit in the summer and fall!

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This tangled mess is a grove of wild mazzard cherry (Prunus avium). Can you tell that it's an introduced invasive plant here in Oregon's Willamette Valley? I don't count them in my fruit tree inventory, but they are tasty little cherries.

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Some trees, like this Gravenstein Apple, still had a few leaves in the tree tops for the ice to hang from. Take a look at those super long icicles hanging from the branch in the lower left. Those are the longest ice storm icicles I have ever seen! The rain froze so fast that it made straight icicles before the tree tops even bent over! That's fast!

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3. A Protection of Buds

There's actually a good side to ice on a fruit tree. By the time winter comes around, the fruit buds for next summer's harvest are already formed. They are just waiting for spring. The little buds can be damaged by really cold temperatures, especially if the air is dry, like after a storm moves through.

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This ice stayed unmelted for four really cold days. But all the little buds were protected from the cold, dry air by their thick coat of ice. They were better off encased in ice!

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What About You?

Have you ever seen air bubbles in icicles? Could you still have an ice storm this winter or in the spring? Do you have any fruit trees? I would like to know!

Other posts in this Ice Storm Series:

  1. The Great Willamette Valley Ice Storm of 2016
  2. Sequoia and Larch Trees
  3. Blue Spruce and Western Redcedar Trees
  4. Noble Fir, Grand Fir, and Eastern White Pine Trees
  5. Douglas-Firs 1
  6. Douglas Firs 2
  7. Ponderosa Pines
  8. Hazel, Walnut, Birch, Holly, and Elm Trees
  9. Garden Plants

I hope you are enjoying these ice storm photosets. There's only one more left - homestead miscellany. Don't miss it! Because then we have an ice storm party! :D



Haphazard Homestead
foraging, gardening, nature, simple living close to the land

All content is 100% Haphazard Homestead - photos and all!

I participate in Operation Translation. All my posts are available for translation under the rules listed on the linked post from @papa-pepper. Logo provided by @oepc85. Post goes 100% to Steem Power! Logo provided by @merej99

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I had always thought the ice would hurt the buds, never thought about it protecting them against very cold dry air for a short period of time. Good post.

Thanks. That's why citrus orchards, in particular, will sometimes spray their trees with water during a severe cold snap. For a citrus tree, a couple degrees is the difference between life and death.

Awesome pictures! I learned some things about the properties of water, too.

Thanks! I snuck in some science, how about that! It was cool to see so many bubbles in the icicles.

Ice sure is a beautiful thing. It's so common that we rarely look at it closely, but when we do, we see very cool formations and effects.

There was a lot of it for me to look at, lol! And it stayed around for so much longer than most ice storms. I was surprised how all those icicles had so many bubbles.

You have amazing icicle photos!!
I didn't know Prunus avium was an invasive plant on the USA...it's native in Portugal and the cherries are very appreciated. I can barely wait til June to eat them again. It's my favourite fruit!! Can you send those trees back, please!? ;)

haha -- We have so many invasive plants courtesy of Europe! Prunus avium is used as a seedling rootstock for grafting on other cherries. So I can see how they got started here. Their fruits are small, but I agree with you that they are delicious.They get ripe here in early July. I like my "cherry grove". But I do need to keep it in check. I can see that it would spread across my entire yard over time. Enjoy your cherries this June!

I will look for these ones, I prefer the dark red ones!! :)

You know what's good to eat! I can eat so many of these little cherries! We have a new invasive fruit fly, though, that is going to cause a lot of problems with these little cherries. It's the Spotted-wing Drosophila (Drosophila suzukii). It starts laying eggs in the fruit, as soon as any color develops. It's going to change everything here in the Pacific Northwest. Invasives! : (

Mee too!! :) OMG, we also have that Drosophila suzukii here in Portugal harming our cherries trees!! I wasn't aware. I will pay more attention now. Hope it doesn't spread too much!

It's going to be a mess! Some of the big cherry orchards are wrapping their entire trees in mosquito netting. An orchard is going to look like pillow-cases on tree trunks! Spraying is not so good -- it has to be so strong that it will kill the fly before it can lay eggs (so, instantly). And as the fruit grows, it needs more spray because the fly will go to the fruit's stretch marks, the gaps in spray coverage from growing. What a mess! I'm going to really try to figure something out this year!

Good luck fighting the mosquitos!! Hope cherry trees win that "war"!

@haphazard-hstead those are wowza icicles pics!

Thanks! There were a lot of icicles to take pictures of, lol!

@haphazard-hstead wtf this is another of those spoiled comments lol

When does a comment spoil? I don't want to harass you with rotten comments.

@haphazard-hstead you're always replying days later :P
so in a sense that comment has been spoiled :P

EDIT : so I was like .. what did i write to her? did I even write? cause i was replying and commenting yesterday too and almost everyday but I don't remember commenting to you anymore

Amazing and wonderful pictures of ice on the plants! Congratulation for the award! :D

Thanks, @tangmo! Ice storms this big don't happen very often. So I wanted to remember it with a lot of pictures. There was a lot of ice!

That's really great pictures! I enjoyed seeing them very much! :D

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