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Editorial index
- Amaryllis
- Deciduous Azalea
- Tuberous begonias
- Berried Treasure
- Summer Flowering Bulbs
- Deer Resistant Spring Bulbs
- Burning Bush
- Evergreen Camelia
- Chitalpa
- Living Xmas Trees
- Autumn Crocus & Colchicum
- Crocosmia
- Forsythia
- Ornamental Grasses
- Pee Gee Hydrangea
- California Lilac
- Native plants
- Osteospermum
- Forcing Paperwhites
- Rhododendrons
- Flower Carpet Roses
- Roses
- Summer Blooming - Shrubs
- Tulips
- Virginia Creeper
- Wisteria
DIY - Do It Yourself
- Planting Fruit Trees
- Pruning Fruit Trees
- Raindrip Watering System


Just for today...

Sit back and resist the urge to putter.

Survey the beauty of an individual flower or take in the garden as a whole feeling all around you.

Stop seeing the tiny flaws.

Enjoy the very simple pleasure of being in your garden...

Today is not a work day.

 

 

Click to go to summer flowering bulbs...

Nigel's Editorial
PRUNING FRUIT TREES

Training of a fruit tree begins in the early years, and the aim is to develop a well balanced framework of branches that are capable of supporting the fruit crop. This permanent framework provides the reference points for pruning a mature tree.

Early pruning should only be enough to establish this desired framework; heavy pruning on a young tree can delay fruiting. I find open centre pruning is the most common and the most beneficial to use on fruit trees. This is the style of pruning I will explain today.

Open style pruning produces a bowl or vase shaped tree with no main central branch but instead many of the major limbs, or scaffold branches, angle outwards from the main trunk. These branches usually start at about 2 to 3 feet above the ground and should spiral around the tree with about 6 inches between each of the branches. Being able to identify the difference between new and old growth and what is a fruiting spur and a fruiting bud is important when pruning.

The new growth has shinier bark. Fruiting spurs and fruiting buds occur on older wood and are the parts of the tree that will result in fruit production. The goal of pruning is to renew these fruiting sites and to keep them exposed to sunlight. Too much shading during the growth season will result in a smaller and lower quality crop.

For mature trees begin pruning by removing any dead or diseased wood, any branches that are too close and are rubbing together and any crossed over branches that are interfering with each other, then remove the obvious suckers and water sprouts. These are the branches that grow straight up and are usually very long and have younger shiny bark.

Cut these right back to the trunk and don't leave any little nubs. Next, remove any undesired limbs completely. It is best to thin out these branches rather than just cutting the heads of them back; this will avoid stimulating a lot of new growth at that part of the tree.

When cutting a larger limb out, do this in two stages. First remove most of the length and weight by cutting two thirds of the branch off (this can be done at any place.) Next removing the remove stub of the branch just above the collar where it joins the main trunk or branch. Again, don't leave any short nubs. By doing this in two stages you reduce the chance of the branch tearing the main trunk. Larger neglected trees may take many seasons to get back into a desired shape, but by removing the most obvious problems first and then moving onto thinning and shaping for fruit production you can again have a nicely shaped tree giving good fruit yields.

...Experience the Joy of Gardening!

 
 


673 Old Petersen Road, Campbell River, BC, Canada
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