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Old 22-11-2006, 05:41 PM posted to rec.gardens
simy1 simy1 is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 150
Default pruning and transplanting plum *bushes*



On Nov 22, 2:49 am, sherwindu wrote:
Not sure what you mean when you say normal pruning will not work. You can
safely remove about 1/3 of a fruit tree's growth every season. You should be
able
to get rid of the suckers, crossing branches, etc. over a few year's time.

Sherwin D.


dead branches, of course, don't count against the 1/3.
Regardless of what you do, as Sherwin suggests, it will take a few
years to clean up the trees.

If you think you are getting enough plums, perhaps you should sacrifice
2 trees and keep three - that would double your spacing. If they are
all fresh eating, poor keeping varieties, that is probably what I would
do. No family can dispatch the fruit of five trees ripening all at once
(unless you have chickens). Stanley plums, canned, are incredibly good,
by the way.


Tater wrote:
ok, plums don't grow on bushes, but they are not pruned properly they
look more like bushes than trees!


anyway, I bought myself a house and it has these plum "plants" than
have been ignored for maybe over ten years. this fall we had a great
crop of plums, so i think i'll try to promote them and see if I can get
a really good crop of them.


problem is, most pruing guides dont work too well, as these have gotten
so wild that pruning them normally wouldnt do much. also, suckers(i
think?) have grown up over the ten years and are competing, making the
trees reach longer and longer. trunks 2 inches in diameter will have
branches over 12 feet long.


anyway, these plums are planted close enough together that the rule of
"make the root ball the same size as the branches" means i'd be
transplanting 4-5 trees at once, when what i really want to do is take
the 4-5 trees and separate them.


advice?