I am thinking that the one thing that could be controlled with the greatest ease is the amount of fruit on the trees. If the fruit was knocked off as soon as it got big enough to see, wouldn't that cause the late season wood to grow thicker? If so, a little planning ahead and knocking the fruit off might produce better bow wood. Does anyone have experience with this?
WA
Interesting question, Made me think. I have more experience with growing trees than making bows.
Fruit thinning has been used in fruit production for years to achieve several outcomes. One being More vegetative growth in a particular growing season. I know from experience that a light fruit load will produce more growth in tree fruits. Now...will this produce better bow wood? I'm not too sure, it could be a lighter SG than it would be otherwise. Sooner you thin the more chance for more growth. Trees do not make up for lost time, if they miss the opportunity to grow its gone. I spent too many days hand thinning fruit years ago, not my favorite thing to do
Lots of factors, all mentioned above contribute. However I will say...identical trees side by side, same genetics they still grow different(faster/slower), but similar go figure lol.
Now, I just wonder if I started sneaking in osage whips in blank spots in the orchard, how long would it be till someone caught on
Hope this helps, Mike