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Roger Tonkin 28-11-2011 04:46 PM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
Off to see daughter on Wednesday. Last night she calmly request that I
bring my lopers and prune her apple and pear trees! She moved in during
the summer and has had a good crop, but wants them controlled a little
bit.

Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!


--
Roger T

700 ft up in Mid-Wales

Dave Hill 28-11-2011 04:55 PM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
On Nov 28, 4:46*pm, Roger Tonkin wrote:
Off to see daughter on Wednesday. Last night she calmly request that I
bring my lopers and prune her apple and pear trees! She moved in during
the summer and has had a good crop, but wants them controlled a little
bit.

Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!

--
Roger T

700 ft up in Mid-Wales


It depends so much on age and size. Just remember 1/3 off to promote
fruiting growtrh. 2/3 to get growth.
Try looking up on google,several short fils on pruning.

Jake 28-11-2011 06:17 PM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 16:46:09 -0000, Roger Tonkin
wrote:

Off to see daughter on Wednesday. Last night she calmly request that I
bring my lopers and prune her apple and pear trees! She moved in during
the summer and has had a good crop, but wants them controlled a little
bit.

Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!


For apples, have a look at
http://www.videojug.com/film/how-to-...umn-and-spring
which'll demonstrate how to do it.

The RHS site has a page on pruning both at
http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/profile.aspx?PID=90

This will be my first year for pruning a pear so I'll be interested in
any advice others offer. All I know is that pears are treated
differently from apples as they bear fruit nearer to the main stems so
you need to allow more stems to develop. But you'll presumably be
pruning established trees so for you the issues will be different.

Hope this helps a bit.


Cheers, Jake
=======================================
URGling in between collecting leaves at
the dryer (east) end of Swansea Bay.

Jim Jackson 28-11-2011 07:00 PM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
On 2011-11-28, Roger Tonkin wrote:
Off to see daughter on Wednesday. Last night she calmly request that I
bring my lopers and prune her apple and pear trees! She moved in during
the summer and has had a good crop, but wants them controlled a little
bit.

Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!


Don't cut like a hedge! You'll remove all the fruiting branches and it
will be a few years before you get a crop again. My neighbour had a
gardener that did that, cut all the branches back heavily every 3 or 4
years. Rarely got a crop. The trees crop wonderfully now and aren't really
taking over.

Will established trees I tend to take out whole branches that are in the
wrong place, then I take out stuff growing into the centre of the tree -
it helps combat disease if air can move easily thru' the tree in summer.

With a lot of apple trees, if you prune back the side shoots off the main
branches to just a few buds, you will encourage fruiting buds to form.
Long whippy stuff shooting up, can be pruned back to sensible lengths.

But beware, hard pruning in winter will mean there is a lot of new growth
to prune next winter too!


Janet Tweedy 29-11-2011 01:36 PM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
In article ,
Roger Tonkin writes
Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!



That's one thing I would never attempt on my own, purely because unless
you identify if the tree is spur or tip bearing and so on and so forth
you can really mess things up!! Can you not get someone to do it for
her?
--
Janet Tweedy
Dalmatian Telegraph
http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk

kay 29-11-2011 06:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Roger Tonkin (Post 942721)
Off to see daughter on Wednesday. Last night she calmly request that I
bring my lopers and prune her apple and pear trees! She moved in during
the summer and has had a good crop, but wants them controlled a little
bit.

Never having pruned fruit trees before, any guidance as to how to go
about it, things to avoid etc. Or shall I just follow my instincts!

I suppose it all depends on what your instincts are!

I've moved over to summer pruning with my mature apple trees on the principle that winter pruning encourages growth, and is the way to go with young trees when you want to encourage them into growth. Summer pruning has the disadvantage that the developing apples get in the way, but you do get a lot less of those long whippy growths that you need to prune away the next time.

But my trees are mature - 6 inch dia trunks - your daughter's may be a lot smaller, in which case pruning now is fine.

Start by having a close look at the trees, and see the difference between leaf buds and the short fat stubbly growths (spurs) which are where the flowers come from. Bear this in mind when you decide which twigs to cut back, and which to take out completely. For each individual twig, do nothing or do a lot - don't just nibble! But others have given you or referred you to good advice.

As to tip and spur bearers - most apples seem to be spur bearers - if you can't find spurs on one of the trees, then it may be a tip bearer so prune with caution.

Oh, and you'd be better with secateurs and a sharp pruning saw. Difficult to be sure of a clean cut with loppers.

Chris J Dixon 07-12-2011 11:55 AM

Pruning Fruit Trees
 
Jake wrote:

For apples, have a look at
http://www.videojug.com/film/how-to-...umn-and-spring
which'll demonstrate how to do it.

The RHS site has a page on pruning both at
http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/profile.aspx?PID=90

My pruning task is rather smaller.

Last November I bought a 2-year bare-root family apple tree from
Blackmoor. On M26 stock I have Discovery, James Grieve and
Sunset.

After planting I cut back the branches by about 1/3.

It is healthy, but has not put on a great deal of new growth, and
I am unsure exactly if, and when to prune again.

Chris
--
Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK


Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh.

Chris J Dixon 12-12-2011 01:01 PM

Pruning Young Apple Tree
 
Last November I bought a 2-year bare-root family apple tree from
Blackmoor. On M26 stock I have Discovery, James Grieve and
Sunset.

After planting I cut back the branches by about 1/3.

It is healthy, but has not put on a great deal of new growth, and
I am unsure exactly when and how to prune again.

Chris
--
Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK


Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh.

Chris J Dixon 12-12-2011 03:40 PM

Pruning Young Apple Tree
 
Sacha wrote:

On 2011-12-12 13:01:05 +0000, Chris J Dixon said:

Last November I bought a 2-year bare-root family apple tree from
Blackmoor. On M26 stock I have Discovery, James Grieve and
Sunset.

After planting I cut back the branches by about 1/3.

It is healthy, but has not put on a great deal of new growth, and
I am unsure exactly when and how to prune again.


They have help and advice on their web site
http://www.blackmoor.co.uk/pruning.php


Yes, I have already read that, but am still having difficulty in
applying it to what stands before me. Some of it, taken
literally, would remove more than this year's growth, which can't
be right.

Chris
--
Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK


Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh.

Jim Jackson 14-12-2011 05:50 PM

Pruning Young Apple Tree
 
Last November I bought a 2-year bare-root family apple tree from
Blackmoor. On M26 stock I have Discovery, James Grieve and
Sunset.

After planting I cut back the branches by about 1/3.

It is healthy, but has not put on a great deal of new growth, and
I am unsure exactly when and how to prune again.


They have help and advice on their web site
http://www.blackmoor.co.uk/pruning.php


Yes, I have already read that, but am still having difficulty in
applying it to what stands before me. Some of it, taken
literally, would remove more than this year's growth, which can't
be right.


I think they mean pruning of the NEW growth.

If you don't have much new growth, then check it's general conditions.
Is there competition from other nearby trees or near a headge or
fence - what's growing over the fence? Is the soil is poor health or
overlying heavy clay builders rubble etc.

If so sort that out and prune the new growth back a bit harder than you
did last time.



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