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Lawrence County
Home and Garden
Pruning Fruit Trees

Fruit trees should be pruned every year to maintain their health, encourage balanced growth and productivity and control their size and shape. When you plant a fruit tree, you should be dedicated to giving the tree proper care and pruning to maximize both fruit quality and quantity throughout the life of the tree. Understanding the principles of pruning and practicing them are important. Pruning is both an art and a science. Artists understand what they are doing and scientists understand why. The objectives of tree pruning are:

  • Develop strong tree structure. This should begin when trees are planted and continue each year thereafter.
     
  • Provide for light penetration. Good light quality throughout the tree increases fruit bud development for following years and increases the quality of the current crop.
     
  • Control tree size. Most fruit trees require pruning to control branch spread as well as tree height. This also serves to encourage new growth that will result in new fruit bearing areas.
     
  • Remove damaged wood. Some wood damage occurs almost every year from such things as wind damage, fruit weight, winter injury and disease and insects.

Pruning is a dwarfing process and may result in a slight reduction in yield compared to an unpruned tree, but the size, color and quality of remaining fruit will be improved.

When to Prune

The best time to prune is during late winter or early spring just before the beginning of active growth. If large blocks of trees are to be pruned, time it so that you finish just before bud break. It will not harm trees if sap is beginning to flow at the time you prune. The main reasons you should prune during the late dormant period are:

  • Wounds heal quickly when growth starts.
     
  • Undesirable branches and other wood to be pruned can be easily seen since there are no leaves on the tree.
     
  • The bark is less likely to tear when cuts are made.
     
  • Trees pruned in early winter may be damaged by low winter temperatures that occur after pruning.

Summer pruning may also be used to control growth of young trees, improve light quality in the fruiting zone, thin heavy fruit loads or remove water sprouts and other undesirable wood.

Pruning Terms

Drawing showing the parts of a fruit tree.Bearing tree – A fruit tree that has reached the stage of development to produce fruit annually.
Branch – A shoot that has developed to maturity and has passed through one or more dormant seasons (Figures 1B and 1C).
Bud – An undeveloped shoot or stem (Figure 1G).
Crotch, crotch angle – The angle between two branches near their point of origin (Figure 1K).
Fruit spurs – Short, thick growth upon which flowers and fruit develop (Figure 1F).
Heading back – Removing a portion of the terminal growth of a branch (Figure 1J).
Leader – A branch selected as a continuation of the trunk and from which scaffold branches develop (Figure 1D).
Scaffold branch – One of the lateral branches making up the basic framework of a tree (Figure 1B).
Secondary branch – A branch which develops from a scaffold branch (Figure 1C).
Shoot – New growth developing during the current season (Figure 1E).
Sucker – A rapidly growing shoot arising from a root or a larger branch (Figure 1I). A water sprout is a sucker growth that generally develops just below a major pruning cut.
Thinning out – The removal of a branch at the point of attachment. This may be removal of small wood (Figure 1H). or it may refer to a large branch or branches.

Trunk – The main stem or body of the tree (Figure 1A).

 

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University of Arkansas
Division of Agriculture
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Last Date Modified 05/15/2008
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Lawrence County
Cooperative Extension Service
1100 West Main Street
Walnut Ridge, AR  72476
Phone (870) 886-3741 • Fax (870) 886-5863

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