 The purpose of doing this video is so that you can help you determine how much damage there is because a grower needs to decide how they continue with their cultural practice whether it be fertilization, pruning or whatever based on if they have a crop or not. As you can see this particular tree has various stages of bud development. There are open blooms and blooms that are still closed. Initial observation here is that most of the open blooms, in fact all the open blooms we find are damaged. They've been killed by the freeze but there are plenty of closed blooms and some of those have been killed as well. The good thing about a peach crop or a peach tree is that this one limb, like the one I'm holding, only needs one or two peaches per limb to make a crop and as you can see there's probably 20 plus buds or blooms on here. So if a grower knows how to look at the bloom or bud and determine if it's a live peach quickly they'll know how to continue. It's evident that if you wait a couple of weeks the live peaches will continue to grow but they need to understand quicker so that they can continue with whatever is going on on the farm. Now we'll show you the difference of what a live peach and a freeze damaged peach looks like inside the bloom. To evaluate whether the peach is live or dead you have to take the bloom apart in order to see the small peach inside. You just remove the petals and the shucks and the very small peach inside the bloom will be right in the middle. In this case this one is dead because it is brown. Here I've taken a couple apart and the one on the left is green, it's very plump where if you look at the one on the right it's already discolored, it's kind of brown looking and as the day wears on this will be more and more evident but here we are just five hours after the freeze and we can already tell what's damaged. So again we might not need but one live peach on this shoot and in this case this is probably enough if it's this way over the whole tree that you probably still have a crop of peaches that can go ahead and take care of them.