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Turning Landscape into Legacy
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The Fertilizer Myth: Why It Fails and What Actually Feeds Fruit Trees
Most trees don’t need fertilizer, especially once they’re established and growing in reasonably intact soil. If the tree is putting on steady growth, holding healthy leaf color, and not showing clear deficiency symptoms, adding fertilizer is unlikely to improve anything and often makes things worse.
Wolfy
Mar 297 min read


You Don’t Prune Heritage Trees. You Keep Them Company.
Heritage trees don’t respond to correction. They respond to restraint. Their energy is no longer spent on expansion but on maintenance—holding together what time and weather have already negotiated. When you prune them as if they were young, you don’t restore vigor. You trigger panic growth, burn reserves, and shorten what life remains. The work shifts here. It stops being about improvement and becomes about mercy: removing what has already failed, easing loads that are alrea
Wolfy
Dec 12, 20256 min read


Seriously. Stop Hard Pruning Your Fruit Trees in Winter
Pruning is not conquest. It’s a negotiation with biology. It should be a conversation across seasons. And the blade should be an instrument of guidance, never of amputation . Every winter the cycle repeats: trees pruned down to stubs, their silhouettes reduced to skeletons against the sky. Owners look on, wincing but resigned, convinced this is what stewardship demands. They’ve been told it’s gospel. They’ve been sold on myth. But in summer reality appears. Instead of fruit,
Wolfy
Aug 17, 20254 min read
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