Maintaining a pyramid shape for your dwarf tree requires you to know a bit about how it grows and needs to be trimmed. With these handy tips, you'll be armed with your shears for when the seasons roll around.
October 9, 2015
Maintaining a pyramid shape for your dwarf tree requires you to know a bit about how it grows and needs to be trimmed. With these handy tips, you'll be armed with your shears for when the seasons roll around.
The topmost bud will grow upward to form the tree's central leader, and the next two buds should form strong branches, but the lowest buds will produce weak branches unless they are stimulated. They should be notched, you can remove a half-moon of bark from above each of these buds.
In the second winter cut back the central leader to about 45 centimetres (18 inches) from the first year's cut. To help produce a straight stem, make the cut just above a bud facing in the opposite direction from the bud chosen during the previous winter.
No pruning is needed in the summer after training a one-year-old tree. For older trees prune new growth as it matures, usually starting in mid-summer and continuing for perhaps a month.
Until the fourth summer remove new shoots growing from the main stem. If new growth is not mature enough for pruning in midsummer, it may be ready in late summer. If it is still not mature enough then — this may be the case in more northerly regions — wait until early fall.
If you have pruned in summer, you may find that secondary growth has sprung from the pruned shoots by fall. If it has been a rather dry summer and not much secondary growth has occurred, cut it all back to one bud from the parent stem during the fall.
After a wet summer that has produced a great amount of such growth, you may have to continue pruning into early winter in order to maintain the pyramidal shape of the tree.
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