Pruning a young apple tree

Discussion in 'Trees' started by Rockhopper69, Dec 11, 2025 at 10:25 PM.

  1. Rockhopper69

    Rockhopper69 Apprentice Gardener

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    I wonder of anybody could give me some advice on best way to prune this apple tree , when i purchased the tree some of the branches were almost bent and twisted , see pics , also when i had a few apples on the branches were sagged alot , i think it needs a good pruning during winter to strengthen the branches . Any help ?
    Thanks in advance
     

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  2. Allotment Boy

    Allotment Boy Lifelong Allotmenteer

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    Oh my, yes you need to shorten those long whippy growths, but before you do consider putting in more support and training it into an espalier, or a fan. That said I would remove some of the lower branches completely, and shorten the others by half at least even if tied in to a support. On another note I would not have let such young tree bear fruit. It needs to establish properly first.
    Check out the RHS website for more advice on formative pruning.
     
  3. Rockhopper69

    Rockhopper69 Apprentice Gardener

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    Thanks for the reply , im unsure exactly what you mean, i thought fan training was on a Wall ? , which branches would you lop off and would you take the lower ones completely off to the main trunk ?
    Re more supports , how shouldni go about this ?
    Yeah as you may guess i dont have a clue
     
  4. Pete8

    Pete8 Total Gardener

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  5. Allotment Boy

    Allotment Boy Lifelong Allotmenteer

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    Yes traditionally you would train a fan on a wall but you could put a piece of trellis up and train to that. You may not want that in the middle of your border. The best shape for a compact free standing tree is a dwarf pyramid, but as you already have very long growth, it would take a lot of cutting back to get to that, and may need to be done over 2-3 years to avoid shocking the tree too much. The next best shape would be an espalier, a post either side with wires or long battens in between positioned to allow you to tie branches in horizontally. Do look up some of these shapes on line as it will be easier to understand than my description.
     
  6. Tidemark

    Tidemark Total Gardener

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    Do you happen to know what variety it is? Or maybe also the rootstock that the variety is grafted onto? Maybe a bit technical. But it looks rather vigorous. I think you are going to have a fight on your hands as it gets older. :)
     
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