Benefits of training your apple and fruit trees
Note: this is part three of a series on fruit trees.
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[March 06, 2021]
Whether you have an orchard or just a few fruit
trees in your backyard or garden, there are many advantages to
training those trees. Now you may be thinking, “You can train a dog,
but not a tree.” In this case though, training means you need to
guide your branches into a proper structure, which will result in
greater productivity, among other benefits. |
Allows light and air
The scaffold branches need to be positioned to allow good sunlight
throughout the canopy to promote fruit production from the interior
to the exterior. This will allow air circulation too, reducing leaf
and fruit diseases, so you benefit in two ways. Proper training also
gives you a tree that can hold the fruit load without needing any
additional support.
Keeps size manageable
Training starts the first year you plant your fruit trees. Using
dwarf apple trees as an example, it is common to use what is termed
the central leader system to train your trees. This system allows
your fruit tree to look more like other trees in your landscape yet
produce apples, without the tree looking like those you see in older
commercial orchards. This ensures your dwarf tree remains dwarf in
your yard or home orchard. As you start to select your scaffold
branches, place the first set no more than 20 to 24 inches from the
ground. By starting that low, you will be able to place additional
scaffolds, and still have a mature tree that is no taller than 6 to
8 feet tall, making it easy to manage.
Makes maintenance easier
There are several other advantages of any well-trained dwarf fruit
tree. Annual spring pruning will be visually much clearer as to
which scaffold branches need your attention. There will be branches
that need to be adjusted using traditional branch spreaders or
alternative methods, such as using twine and a stake to pull the
branch into the desired horizontal plane as you develop your
scaffolds. [to top of second
column] |
Water sprouts will be easily identified, as they will
be growing straight up from the horizontal scaffold branches.
Helps prevent pest problems
As your dwarf fruit tree matures in size, home orchardists will
realize there are even more benefits. The weekly inspection and
monitoring of fruit pests will be easier and done very quickly. Even
though a young fruit tree may not be producing apples, there are
insects and foliar diseases that need to be taken care of. Foliage
feeding insects reduce the canopy, reducing the amount of food that
could go into growth and development. Leaf diseases have a similar
impact. If allowed to continue over the season or seasons, they
could easily delay fruit production and in a bigger picture, lesson
the overall vigor and any fruit production. You want a tree that
develops quickly, so that your training then can encourage flowers
and fruit set.
Select system by species
Besides apples, our pears, sweet cherries, and European plums also
get the central leader treatment. Peaches and tart (sour) cherries
are trained into an open center system, which is bowl-like in shape
with no interior branches. [Posted
by Richard Hentschel, University of Illinois Extension, Horticulture
Educator] |