Tim Brayford Garden Design- Isle of Wight
Tim Brayford Garden Design - Isle of Wight

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Apples and Pears -
The Quick Guide to Winter Pruning

  If in doubt...Don't! Well, you have to agree, that was quick. But I think we can do better than that. Apples and pears will quite often fruit reasonably well if you just leave them alone but they will get to a stage where overcrowding of branches and disease will cut down the on the reason we grow them; the fruit.

Why do we prune? We need to prune to encourage fruiting 'spurs', clear out any dead or diseased wood and generally shape the tree to an attractive form. We've all seen children's drawings of trees, generally a cup on a leg, and for ordinary bush forms, which is what we shall deal with here, that's not far off the ideal.

Stand back and take a good look at your tree. Is it the shape you want? Does it interfere with paths, buildings etc? Don't be afraid to tackle it, you're the boss!

Taking out branches which cross over the middle of the cup is a good idea as it keeps the air moving through the tree when it's in full leaf and helps to prevent fungus diseases. If your tree has several branches in this position remove only one or two each winter as a severe removal of a large mass of branches will result in the tree producing a lot of compensating growth the next year and very little fruit. The same goes for branches which need to come out to improve the shape. Remove any branches which are diseased or have died back to where you are sure the growth looks clean.
RULE 1.
Stagger removal of large branches over several winters.

RULE 2.
Cut cleanly, using a pruning saw or good loppers,leaving a very small 'stub', which should heal over by itself.

Now come in close and look at one major branch at a time to assess it's fruiting ability. Most varieties produce fruiting spurs which are clusters of small, knobbly twigs with fat flower buds on.(Growth buds tend to be thinner and pointed) What you are aiming for is a framework of branches with a good coverage of spurs.
What you may have are branches covered with lots of whippy growth about 6 to 12 inches long (showing my age there I'm afraid!), these will need to be shortened to two buds long, in other words where two leaves were in the summer. If it is very crowded you may need to remove some altogether, spacing them out along the branches about 5 to 6 inches apart is good. These will then start to produce flower buds over the next summer.

RULE 3.
Shorten small whippy growth to encourage fruiting spurs.
This is a much simplified guide to winter pruning but it gives you the basics to tackle your fruit trees, if you decide to pursue this topic further there are many good books available or call in an expert, we've been keeping trees performing well for years!

Word of Caution - If someone comes to prune your fruit trees with a chainsaw, show them the gate... If that's what they need then they're taking off too much!

By: 'Er Outdoors.