My espaliered pear trees are filled with hundreds of little pears!!! The first year. I guess pruning them right was the trick.
I am wondering if I should remove some of the pears. I'll look into that. Soon I will bag them with either plastic baggies or paper bags to protect against bugs and chipmunks.
I have a lot of young apples on my apple tree .. yet the tree is only in it's 2nd year (with me anyway) ... I am more than likely going to pull them off so the energy can be focused on growing the tree still rather than the fruit.
ReplyDeleteDoes the paper bag trick work? Chimpmunks took all of our peaches and apples last year! We didn't even get one!
ReplyDeleteMichele~ Topsfield, Ma
Yes, bagging works really well. It may look silly. I have always used baggies and probably will this year. Maybe after the upcoming rain I'll put them on. I read to remove pears so they are 8 inches apart. Maybe I will go with 5 inches....
ReplyDeleteDo you use a twist tie around each plastic grocery bag so that it is closed? or are you using the ziplock type of bag and zip it up as far as it will go?
ReplyDeleteMichele ~ topsfield, ma
If I buy a pear tree that's 3 years old . How long will it to produce fruit fruit?
ReplyDeleteLove your blog.
ReplyDeleteHope this article http://www.stellaotto.com/documents/admin/1371057923-thinning.pdf
from my website might help you decide about thinning those pears.
Leaving excess fruit on the tree will have a dwarfing effect on the tree. Thinning the fruit will increase fruit size.
Stella - the Backyard Fruit Grower
Can you tell me the name of the book you used as a reference to pruning your pear trees?
ReplyDelete