Pruning Peach Trees

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  • čas přidán 17. 02. 2012
  • How to prune peach trees with Bill Merrill
    www.greengardenservice.net

Komentáře • 265

  • @Slish514
    @Slish514 Před 8 lety +16

    I love this video. I've watched it every February for three years in a row now as a quick tutorial before I attack our peach tree in the backyard. Almost every year after pruning I get a comment about, "What happened to your peach tree?!?!" so I know I'm doing it right. :) Thanks so much for the tutorial and information.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +3

      +Slish514 Very funny! I often had the same comment from people. Understanding proper fruit tree pruning seems to be a scarce knowledge. I actually get comments on these videos from people fearing I am destroying the trees. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have seen a lot of peach trees that have less than 60% of last years growth removed and they are sad to miserable. If your friends are in shock you probably did it right. Thanks for staying tuned for years. Bill

    • @michaeljordan317
      @michaeljordan317 Před 2 lety

      Lol

  • @thesilverbackozzy8323
    @thesilverbackozzy8323 Před 5 lety

    Another great instructional pruning video, thanks mate. When I teach my kids a skill that they can use for the rest of there life I tell them "thats a lifer kids". You just taught me a "lifer" that I'll pass on to my kids. Thank you Cobba.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety

      Wow, never thought I would become a family tradition! Bill

  • @albatross2215
    @albatross2215 Před 7 lety +5

    Thanks for making a simple non confusing video on how to do this! Hands down the best video on the web for pruning a peach tree!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you for making use of it. Subscribe and check in from time to time. I post new videos every week at least.

  • @new_england_times553
    @new_england_times553 Před 6 lety +3

    You're my go to guy on how to prune fruit trees. lol I have about 16 different fruit trees in my yard and when I need an answer I type in the question with your name. lol

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 6 lety +2

      That is the best way to use this channel since I have so many video I don't even remember what is here. Thanks Bill

  • @kkingwarner
    @kkingwarner Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you so much!!!! You explain pruning in a way I can understand. You show what to do right after you talk about it. The way you explained how the tree needs to breathe really helped me understand. Again, Thank YOU!!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you, glad I could help out. Stone fruit trees like peach, nectarine, plum, apricot and cherry will fruit both on the inside of the tree and on the outside if sunlight is allowed to reach to the core of the plant. This doubles the yield. If the center of the tree is lift closed the fruit only forms along the outside. When in doubt with peaches cut more wood rather than less because the limbs are very weak and break easily. Aloha, Bill

  • @cindybonem494
    @cindybonem494 Před 4 lety

    I have watched many, many videos on how to prune fruit trees and raspberries but yours are hands down the best most complete videos that I’ve watched, Thank you for sharing your expertise in a clear, fun and simple manner. I’m sitting hear in a bit of shock thinking that it’s so easy. Thank you, you have the gift of teaching, Cindy

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 4 lety +1

      Cindy, I tend to make it look easy and it is but it is also a lot like playing guitar. Once you know how it's simple. Understand the basics of pruning and the rest will come natural.

  • @Slish514
    @Slish514 Před 11 lety +1

    Thanks so much for the advise! I went ahead and pruned it, following your directions in the video. I think my husband was a bit alarmed by what I cut off, but I was expecting that. :)

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety +2

    The universe laughs with us when we have a sense of humor. Thanks.

  • @doozhead
    @doozhead Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you. You have a great teaching style and passion for what you do. It shows. I planted my first peach 2 years ago here in Northern California, and now I feel like I have a pretty good idea of what I'm doing. Thanks.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      You're welcome. Pruning on peaches is one of the important aspects of cultivation. Keep the tree as close to the ground as makes sense. Don't forget to use horticultural oil with copper as a spray for control of peach leaf curl. November and February are the best months to apply but December and January will work to some extent. Thanks for the feed back, Bill

  • @saraquil420
    @saraquil420 Před 8 lety

    I just bought a fruit cocktail tree, with three types of peaches and two types of nectarines. Before watching this I felt a bit intimidated, but thank you I feel confident in caring for my new tree. Just subscribed.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +1

      +saraquil420 Thank you for the feed back and for subscribing. Since Nectarines are Peaches without fur your tree would be pruned exactly the same as a tree that was all one fruit. The once consideration would be conserving all of the original grafts when pruning. Bill

  • @SuperManning11
    @SuperManning11 Před 5 lety

    This was VERY HELPFUL! Thank you! I planted a peach about three years ago. The first year I did not prune because I didn't know I needed to. Last year I pruned without the guidance of this great video and I'm probably lucky that I didn't kill the tree. I pruned in the late spring but it seemed to take about a month to recover and then start to grow again over the summer. I live in the desert (Palm Springs) and the peaches usually ripen very early in the summer here. I was just glad that my tree had survived and was not looking for fruit until one day in October when I noticed what looked like a very small peach on the ground. When I looked carefully the tree was actually covered in very small, already ripe peaches! There were probably 30 peaches on that small tree, not one of them bigger than a silver dollar, most much smaller. But they tasted great. So this year I'm hoping to do much better after your very instructive video. Thank you very much and I hope you have a great growing season!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety

      You're welcome. Thanks for tuning in and offering feed back. Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Aaron, keep in mind two things about peaches while pruning. One is that they only fruit on last years wood. Wood that grew during the summer of 2011 will never fruit again. To keep lots of fresh wood coming on you have to prune pretty hard. The second thing is the wood is weak, it breaks easily under a load. Keeping the tree pruned close to the trunk will reduce the pressure and heavy pruning of last years shoots will reduce the fruit load. You will get larger fruit and no broken limbs.

  • @ruthcavanaugh7240
    @ruthcavanaugh7240 Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you Mr Merrill for teaching me how to prune a peach tree. :-)

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      Ruth Cavanaugh Thank you for the nice feed back, glad I could help out. Bill

  • @tc96z1
    @tc96z1 Před 8 lety +1

    I was a little unsure watching other videos, then yours. Seeing how you performed invasive surgery, with confidence, on a trees under the care of a 'quack' made a lot of sense. I hope the homeowner was understanding. ;-)

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +2

      +tc96z1 The home owner fired me. Not because I did poor work but because he judged my fee was too high. He is back to people who hack trees for cheap. You get what you pay for. Thanks for the feed back, glad the video made the principles clear. I have used these pruning techniques on Nectarines and Peaches for many years and they produce strong healthy trees with good crops.

  • @timingisperfect
    @timingisperfect Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks Bill, I planted a peach last year and it is time to prune. It went from stick to large shrub size but I will try to stay strong and cut off a lot like you have instructed! Don't want it to get away from me in subsequent years, and hopefully will get some fruit off it this season.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +4

      I wouldn't get too worried about developing fruit on such a young tree yet. Your job at the moment is to structure the tree so the mature plant has good architecture. Peach pruning in the first three years of life is to develop the canopy. After that you shift gears and prune for fruit and size. Right now you need a nice 2 to 3 foot high central trunk with between 3 and 5 well placed scaffold limbs coming from it. If you look from above they should be separated like spokes in a wheel.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

    Fruit trees can be pruned at different times of the year depending on the system you are using. The simplest way is to wait until the leaves fall off so you can see the branches. It is much easier to visualize the finished tree this way and the buds will be hard so they resist damage. In CA we usually do dormant pruning between Nov. and Feb. If you live in a colder, more northern location you might wait until the end of winter before pruning. This eliminates cold damage after pruning.

  • @NotTelling51
    @NotTelling51 Před 12 lety

    Again, best info. about gardening I've seen on youtube bar none. Great info.

  • @TheSumaru01
    @TheSumaru01 Před 4 lety

    Your explainating was best for me.
    Thank you from.Melbourne Australia mate.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you for the comment. Really glad I could help. Aloha

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety +3

    There are several different schools of thought on pruning peaches, all different yet all correct. In the video I demonstrate the classic dormant season pruning approach. If you live in a mild winter climate prune between November and early February. If you are in a cold winter zone then wait to prune until the coldest weather is past but the tree is still dormant.

  • @trevorjohnson5474
    @trevorjohnson5474 Před 12 lety

    Love your plan off action and wit.

  • @RossYoungblood
    @RossYoungblood Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks Bill. Learned a lot from your video!

  • @pauljohn3230
    @pauljohn3230 Před 11 lety

    Nice one mate. I know very little about fruit trees but I've recently become fascinated. My old man has a bunch of neglected trees, peach, plum, apple... some of them must be 50 year old or more, the apple trees especially are massive!
    I'm looking forward to doing some work on them and this has been quite helpful.

  • @ravhalken
    @ravhalken Před 8 lety +1

    you are the man. thanks for simplifying it for the the average guy

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +1

      +ravhalken You are very welcome. Thanks for watching my channel. Share and spread the good word.

  • @magdalenam3737
    @magdalenam3737 Před 5 lety

    Thank you soooo much for such an informative video. I'm ready to tackle the aggressive pruning you've shown here!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety +1

      This goes on every winter if you want good peaches and a healthy tree. Thanks for watching. Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Really glad I was able to get you set into a good direction with the trees. Good luck on them. Remember that subtraction is easy while pruning but addition is impossible. Scope the plant out well before starting and try to spot the finished product in the mess before you get started. Thanks for the comment.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    We usually prune peaches in the dormant season. They can be pruned in the growing season but only with care not to damage the tender shoots, leaves, flowers or fruit. Peaches only make flowers and fruit on wood that was grown in the pervious season. Older wood is fruitless and so is younger wood. Every year we cut away about 60% of last years growth during the winter to keep the fruit load closer to the tree center and to limit the amount of fruit. This keeps the tree from breaking.

  • @aerofart
    @aerofart Před 11 lety

    Thanks for the quick response, Bill. I did a little pruning as per your instructions today. I made a short video of the process which I will post as a video reply soon so that you can take a look at what I did and hopefully answer a couple more questions that resulted from the process.

  • @ogeecheevalley
    @ogeecheevalley Před 12 lety

    love the humor. great video.

  • @MihalacheFlorin
    @MihalacheFlorin Před 12 lety

    had a very good starting.looks much better now!

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety

    Glad you got some information and a laugh. I will be pruning this tree again this winter. I will try to film.

  • @LuisFilipeMagro
    @LuisFilipeMagro Před 8 lety +2

    Hello Dear Bill,
    Thank you very much for all the great videos you have been uploading. I have been really digging into them since i have found them a week ago. I really do value your opinion and knowledge.
    About a year ago i moved from the Big City apartment (Lisbon) to a house (with garden) in a small city named Alverca (13km out) and i have been trying to take care of the fruit trees here (Orange, Lemon, Clementine, Pomegranate, Loquat, Apple and Pear trees are the ones i have in around 300-500 square metres) and learning as i go. All new to me but i love it. People living in big cities don't know what they are missing. This is real life. I even saw a Ladybug few months ago.
    Is there any possibility of making a video about Loquats (aka Japanese plum, i think. Here in Portugal we call them Nêsperas.)? I haven't found any on your playlists. Like best pruning methods, common diseases and organic/natural/less harmful for the environment ways to deal with such pests and diseases. My Loquats have by this time of year a moldy like disease on them, blacks them out and dries them up and also affects the leaves. Are the pruning methods similar to apricots and peaches?
    Also I will probably, after viewing a few more videos and reading up on the comments, return here and ask more about peach diseases. My peach tree is severely damaged. The bark oozes sap and has many tiny puncture like holes. I've cut off a dead limb and found a big (4-5 cm) white larvae with a flat head (like a rattlesnake's) inside of it. The bark and root don't look so good as well near the soil... From i could find out on the net its caused by borers. I couldn't pinpoint exactly which insects leave those larvae.
    Thank very much, pardon the bad English, and the long writing.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +2

      +Luis Magro Thank you for the kind feed back. I am glad my videos are an aid to you. I had to laugh about you seeing a lady bug. A true wild life adventure!
      The Japanese Plum and the Loquat are different. Japanese plum in English is the same as European plum other than original origin. The disease you describe sounds like Fire Blight on Loquat. The disease has to be pruned from the tree taking care to remove at least .3 meters below the damage of healthy wood too. Clean the shears with alcohol between each cut. Keep the disease pruned from the tree when ever you see it is present. It transmits from infected trees or branch to uninfected during the bloom season. Pollinating insects move it from plant to plant.
      You peach has boring insects. They usually occur when a plant is long neglected and struggling for water or fertilizer. Saving the tree may not be possible. It depends on how long this has been going on. There are insecticides that will work on borers but it may be simpler just to remove the damaged tree and replace with a fresh one. Peaches only have a healthy bearing life of about 14 years. They are not long lived trees. Old ones are best converted to fire wood. Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    You're welcome. If all the shoots from ground level are peach then it came from a seed. This is pretty common, peach pits sprout easily. I have never seen a good peach from a seed but I have heard others disagree with me. I believe it depends on how critical you are about the size and quality of peaches. At the worst it would probably be good for jam.

  • @digitalmegatrends546
    @digitalmegatrends546 Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome pruning n telling how to climb a wall

  • @WWYDdotORG
    @WWYDdotORG Před 10 lety

    Thanks for the video! Good teaching with humor... Just picked up a 7' RedHaven Peach for here in west-central Virginia. First Peach tree...

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +2

      Red Haven is a choice peach, you will enjoy it. If it is seven feet tall in the pot consider taking after the main trunk with a pruning shear. The central trunk of the peach should be between 1 1/2' and 3' feet tall when it is headed back. From there you develop the scaffold limbs. There should be 3 to 5 of these spread a part from each other on the trunk and running around it like spokes of a wheel. Enjoy the peach pie, Bill

  • @Slish514
    @Slish514 Před 5 lety

    Still one of my favorite videos. :)

  • @wompton
    @wompton Před 12 lety

    thanks. much obliged on all your pruning vids

  • @stardustdivinedesign
    @stardustdivinedesign Před 5 lety

    Thank you for all the great info!!!

  • @hedland
    @hedland Před 11 lety

    Thanks for the video. I intend to prune back next month (I'm in Australia) and will follow your tips.
    One thing - obviously yours is not the only video I have viewed - I watched an ABC TV video which recommends finally tip pruning back to fruiting (double or treble) buds as opposed to growth (single) buds to restrict growth.
    May be worth a mention next time:)

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety +1

    @juarezmayra22 Thank you for the positive feed back. I am happy that you enjoy the videos. Bill

  • @Carroll49
    @Carroll49 Před 11 lety

    Thanks for the explinations. The best.

  • @frnknsns
    @frnknsns Před 12 lety

    thank you very much for sharing your knowledge !!

  • @danielpauldebs6526
    @danielpauldebs6526 Před 3 lety

    Excellent presentation thanks. Short and pertinent.

  • @XRPVampire
    @XRPVampire Před 12 lety

    Well done Sir!!!!

  • @fryloc77
    @fryloc77 Před 12 lety

    great video!

  • @tobo26
    @tobo26 Před 8 lety

    Thank you, it was very easy to follow.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +1

      +tobo26 You're welcome, thanks for viewing. Please subscribe and share. Bill

  • @14banjo1
    @14banjo1 Před 12 lety

    thanks again for the great lesson...(we use the same wall climbing methods in australia) cheers

  • @sergeysamoilenko8070
    @sergeysamoilenko8070 Před rokem

    Nicely done! Thank you very much!

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety

    @bradgray51 Thanks so much for the positive feed back. Glad you can make use of it. Bill

  • @rudeboycolin261
    @rudeboycolin261 Před 5 lety

    Finally!!! I video to help me prune my peach/nectarines. I too will be dealing with the sins of my father. My trees resemble this one and not the ideal orchard setting from so many other videos. Please do a follow up of this tree.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety

      Sorry, I sold the home in California a few years back and moved to Hawaii. Peaches don't grow here so I no longer prune them. A follow up would just be the same thing over and over again anyway. There is no real difference in pruning from one year to the next once you get a system in place. Aloha

  • @geraldfranz9085
    @geraldfranz9085 Před 5 lety

    Damn informative video Mr. Bill !!!
    Entertaining and informative. Blew my mind when I saw how much wood you removed, but made plenty sense as you explained each cut. Thank you for sharing, I'm now a new subscriber and I gleamed a lot of info just reading through the comments. Holy peach tree Batman, this guy knows his shit !!! LOL !!!
    All the best to you and God bless.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety

      Welcome, new videos almost every week. Working on a container garden video at the moment. Aloha, Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    It depends on how cold it gets after you prune. If you find dead wood in spring you may have pruned a bit early. Any damage done will grow new wood. Judge your pruning by the coming of spring in your area.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Perhaps the other garden video guys aren't used to answering questions for people. Peaches in the first three years of life are pruned to develop the central architecture of the mature tree. This consists of a central trunk between 2 and 4 feet high, with three to four main scaffold limbs toped with secondary limbs about 8 to 10 " apart. You can do this pruning during the summer if need be. After the third year you prune 60% of last year growth, thin the limbs and keep the center open.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Timing of the pruning depends on where you live. In Coastal CA we prune between November and early Feb. In colder climates we wait until the worst chill of winter is over before pruning peaches. This avoids the freezing of wood after pruning.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety

    Thank you for the good word. Stay tuned, more to come.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Pruning now would be better than than not pruning but mark your calendar out for a dormant spray program and a dormant season pruning for next year. November to Feb. is best. I always prune before I spray to prevent peach leaf curl. Less wood in the tree the easier the spray program is.

  • @ballinginny3024
    @ballinginny3024 Před 9 lety +1

    love this guy

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      Thank you so much for the feed back. Love is something we can never get enough of. Like BB King says "My Mamma says she loves me but she could be jiving too!" Enjoy the videos. Bill

  • @Mary70490
    @Mary70490 Před 11 lety

    Thank you for your response! There are definitely peach tree leaves, so perhaps your seed idea is the case here. I will remove all but one trunk and see what develops, since there is no shortage of space at the moment. Thanks again!

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    There are no hard and fast rules to the timing of peach pruning. The only reason most of never prune in bloom is because pruning is a vigorous activity and spring flowers are very tender. In the winter when the tree is dormant you can drag wood through the canopy without effecting soft tissue. I just finished pruning an apricot that had the buds swelled. No damage was done but I was gentle with the wood. Do it, but be gentle otherwise you will shred the soft buds.

  • @yeticusrex1661
    @yeticusrex1661 Před 6 lety

    Subscribed. You and I could be long lost cousins since we share the same attitudes towards pruning ....and squirrels.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 6 lety +1

      Since moving from California to Hawaii I no longer need to worry about squirrels but Cardinals and Myna Birds have become my new arch enemy. Thanks for watching, stay tuned. Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    I assume it has been in the ground for about 3 years. The first three years is usually when we train the form of the adult tree. Since this wasn't done you will need to find a good structure inside the tree and subtract everything else that grew. The only risk of pruning during fruiting is damage to the crop. If you don't care about the crop or you are careful you can begin training the tree now. You want a short main trunk, 3 to 5 scaffold limbs with open center, like a bowl.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    The only reason we don't prune while trees are blooming is because their tissue is very tender and easily damaged at that time. When a peach is dormant you can drag wood through the canopy and cause little injury. When it is flowering the tissue is fragile and it will shred from the work. If you are gentle you can do it. If you are too vigorus you will make a mess. Be gentle

  • @vikasverma8503
    @vikasverma8503 Před 6 lety

    great video

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Thank you Aaron, you're welcome. Bill

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    You are correct in assuming an over grown and over loaded peach tree is a danger to it's self. Prune as needed to correct fatal flaws in the trees structure. Try to get into a pattern of annual pruning with peaches. Generally the dormant season is best because it is more difficult to injure the tree at that time. Good luck, a tree ripened peach is a thing of beauty.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety

    Leave an abundance of last years wood for fruit production but cut all of that wood back by about 50% to avoid over bearing. Enjoy the fruits of you labor.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Actually I did indicate this as one of the steps. I use different language to describe the process though because counting the size of buds is not only tedious and too slow it is harder to understand for the novice gardener. I have stated in my video to prune all of last years growth twigs back by 50% to 60% of their length. This amounts to the same as double and triple buds because the multi buds are in the lower 50% of the twig. It is faster, easier and keeps the branches short. Thanks.

  • @mordsith05
    @mordsith05 Před 9 lety +2

    you rock!

  • @aerofart
    @aerofart Před 11 lety

    Hey Bill, great video as usual. I planted a very young (1-2 years old, tops) Babcock Peach about 6 months ago. I am happy to report it is doing quite well, putting on new lateral branches and gaining in girth. It only had a central leader and no laterals when I got it. Should I prune it anything this early on?

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    If it has no laterals I would probably just cut the top back a few inches and then wait for winter before I bothered it again. Cutting the top back will force some laterals to develop.

  • @EarthbagHomesteader
    @EarthbagHomesteader Před 11 lety

    I should have read the rest of the comments. I think you answered my question.

  • @jimstormcrow
    @jimstormcrow Před 9 lety

    Good job, thanks for that.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      jimstormcrow You're welcome, hope it helps.

    • @jimstormcrow
      @jimstormcrow Před 9 lety +1

      It did indeed...I use CZcams all the time but it never occurred to me that there would be a video on pruning peaches...ha!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +2

      jimstormcrow I have videos for pruning most of the common fruit trees and a few of the uncommon. Check in next time you need garden information. Thanks again, Bill

  • @EarthbagHomesteader
    @EarthbagHomesteader Před 11 lety

    I am on a second year and not sure if I pruned enough after planting. Seems a little top heavy. Should I leave it till Nov of cut some now. I have a couple peaches I suppose I should take them off also? thank you for responding, I have noticed on other garden videos most people don't respond when asked a question.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    You might be a bit early, depends on when spring breaks for you. Pruning about 30 days before spring bud break is usually fine.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Peaches usually start to bare a fair crop after the third year. Two years is pushing it a bit but you may get a few. The early fruit isn't usually the quality of older trees though.
    Almost all peach varieties are self fertile so they don't require a second tree. Planting a second tree of a earlier or later variety will extend your harvest though.

  • @christophergruenwald5054

    I hope the home owner understands why you cut it how you did so they hired you back in the following years, plus not stuffing you for “ruining” their pretty tree. It looks good, I’m preparing now to begin the first pruning of my fruit trees in their first dormancy. I can’t wait.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 5 lety

      I retired several years ago. The only trees I ever prune are my own. No need to worry about clients feelings. My fee was extremely high so most people that hired me would trust that I knew exactly what I was doing.

  • @mrilovetheants
    @mrilovetheants Před 12 lety

    I have a 5 in 1 Peach (and related fruits) tree, 1 Nectarine tree, and 4 Plum trees; would this work on all of those?

  • @charlesleveridge6022
    @charlesleveridge6022 Před 10 lety

    Bill, it is my understanding cankers can develop at the pruning site. Would you recommend the use of a pruning sealer at sites over one inch?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      The debate among arborist as to whether pruning sealers are positive or negative still rages on. I sit in the camp of those who use them only on occasion for extremely large wounds and then check on what is happening with them annually after application. The sealers often lift when the wound compartmentalizes and create a water proof pocket for rot to develop. As far as using them to prevent canker goes, they won't help one bit. Cankers are spread by the cutting tools. If you cut an infected area and don't clean your tool before moving you spread the disease as you go. The sealer won't stop this from happening, rubbing alcohol on the tool would be more useful.

  • @thelizardiscool
    @thelizardiscool Před 9 lety

    Grest video! What's the best time of year to prune a peach in zone 7?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      liz hodgson Prune peaches at the end of winter but before the buds break in spring.

  • @wanitag5244
    @wanitag5244 Před 11 lety

    Liked your video on pruning. It looked as tho the tree was just budding. Do you prune in early spring? I am raising a peach tree and training it espalier. Have way too much growth and had no peaches this year. This would be the 4th year for the tree. In reading your comment section I'm wondering if I can go ahead and prune now (early July). I am totally new to growing fruit trees and have lots to learn.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety

    If you decide to limit the number of trunks you can do that work at anytime. I would probably limit the number of trunks to about three. Since peaches aren't usually reliably hardy in Chicago having an extra trunk or two would be considered insurance. Otherwise I would recommend doing the annual pruning in March. That should be ahead of the buds breaking for spring but after the worst winter cold. Pruning peachs too early in the winter in your climate isn't a good idea.

  • @Mary70490
    @Mary70490 Před 11 lety

    I just bought a property that has a couple of peach trees that look like they were neglected for years. One seems to have about a dozen trunks (I assume suckers grew up and were let alone and it became a multi-trunked tree). The tree is about 7' tall. Will it harm the tree to remove all but a couple (or even one) of those trunks, and then start training that tree to the bowl shape you describe? Thank you, Mary

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Cool.

  • @VinceEspositoJr
    @VinceEspositoJr Před 11 lety

    Bill, can you opine on fertilizing peach trees? I had my first small crop this year, but the fruit were a bit small (no thinning was necessary). There could be a few reasons for this - it was the first crop and I live on the weather fringe for success or failure with peaches, but I do want to make sure the trees are not under nourished. I see that some sites recommend a nitrogen-heavy fertilizer but I want fruit not veg growth. Should I be looking for a particular balance/mixture or brand? TY

  • @Mehmood127able
    @Mehmood127able Před 7 lety

    i liked your knowledge provided about the peach but what is the remedy to get rid of the leaf curl ?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 7 lety +1

      Use copper and oil or lime sulfur and oil in November and again in February. czcams.com/video/jZgDdTSZ-Lo/video.html

  • @Slish514
    @Slish514 Před 11 lety

    Great video! My tree is already covered in leaves and 50 million itty bitty peaches, and it is growing very vertical. It is a few years old. If I'm careful, do you think it's ok to prune it now?

  • @jasonkol5279
    @jasonkol5279 Před 10 lety +2

    Really great video and enjoyed your enthusiasm. I have a a peach tree that was planted in approximately 2007 and while it produces wonderful fruit, it clearly has never been pruned before. When's a good time of year to do some heavy pruning?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      A 7 year old peach that has never been pruned won't be producing wonderful fruit for very long. You are probably on the verge of a canopy collapse. You will probably have to cut the tree back to just the 3 to 5 main scaffold branches this winter. Since I don't know where you live it is difficult for me to advise you about pruning time. The best time to do heavy pruning is during the dormant season. If you prune between bud break and harvest you run the risk of destroying tender tissue or the crop. Pruning right after harvest is okay but only if your peach is an early variety and you have a growing season over 250 days. Otherwise just wait for the winter to do your work. Good luck, Bill

    • @jasonkol5279
      @jasonkol5279 Před 10 lety

      Hi Bill, I'm just North of Salt Lake City, UT. My USDA Hardiness Zone is 7a (if that matters). After watching your video, I clearly have my work cut out for me.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      Jason Kol The trouble with summer pruning the peach in Salt Lake is, by the time you harvest the fruit it may be too late to prune. You have to make sure there is enough summer left, when pruning during the growing season, for the regrowth to mature before winter comes. You can work at some of it now but I would put off most of the work until late winter in 2015.

  • @plove53
    @plove53 Před 9 lety

    Great Vid... how is the harvest the first year after pruning?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      The harvest would be the same as any other year after the tree reaches maturity. Annual pruning on peaches is required in order to limit fruit set and strengthen the tree frame work. The results of not pruning away 60% of last years growth every year on a peach produces lots of small peaches rather than average size fruit and eventually broken limbs or complete tree collapse.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety

    @mrilovetheants Multi grafts are one of the most difficult plants to prune. The peach and the nectarine are pruned as per my video. They fruit only on last years wood. The plum fruits on last years wood and spurs that live for many years. After 7 years you could probably cut away 100% of last years growth on the plums and still get a crop. Prune as per the video but make sure to save the short fruit bearing twigs on the plums called spurs

  • @123lol1234know
    @123lol1234know Před 10 lety

    Thank you for the Video :) love your humor!
    I have a peach tree, its about 2 years old. and never been prune before. now its starting to grow a lot of small peaches I am wondering, it is too late to prune them? I don't want the tree start breaking off :(

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +3

      The wood in a 2 year old tree should be light enough that you can prune branches during the fruit phase without damaging the surrounding buds. The main reason we don't prune right after flowering is because the buds are very tender and break off from friction. In the winter the tree is hard and will take a lot of beating. As long as you can gently lift the branches out of the tree feel free to prune. Bill

  • @WhySoManyPasswords
    @WhySoManyPasswords Před 10 lety

    Uncle Jesse, how's the Duke Boy's? :-)
    Just kidding.
    What a great informative video!
    Thank You!
    I am growing some peaches from seed now.
    Do you have advice on clippings, when to clip and root starter?

  • @everg108
    @everg108 Před 11 lety

    My peach tree has started to have peaches. I didn't know about pruning until my neighbor said I should remove many of the peaches. Is there any pruning I can do now? There are many little branches about 1/8 of an inch with small peaches. Any idea of what to do now?

  • @Viva_la_natura
    @Viva_la_natura Před 6 lety

    Hi Bill, you wouldn't have any advice on how to handle peach tree borer would you?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 6 lety

      First things first. Borers usually only attack trees that are stressed, sick or dying. Keep peaches well pruned, well feed and properly irrigated and you should not have much trouble with them. Borers come in and go out so catching them with sprays, traps of pest barriers as they come to lay eggs or exit to pupate. Painting the trunks white confuses the adults and limits egg laying. There are pheromone traps for the adults on the market. A band of Tangle foot on the trunk helps to trap the insects as they lay eggs or exit the tree. Otherwise Peaches are pretty short lived trees. If you have hit the seventh year and the tree is still healthy then it is time to cut the tree back to scaffold limbs. They usually do not survive well past the 14th year. If it is an old tree I would just replace it.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    Usually fruit size in peaches is dictated by the variety or the density of the fruit set. You said the set was light so we can dismiss over cropping. Not all peaches are the same size, variety matters a lot. A young tree that isn't properly established can also effect fruit. All fruit trees need fertilizer because they are high performance plants. You will do fine with a balanced organic like 5-5-5 or with a product labeled for fruit trees. Even chicken manure will work.

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 11 lety

    The suckers that grew up around the tree are not peach if the tree was a named grafted variety. Usually they would be Myrobalan plum. The leaves will be very different from peach. If no peach leaves exist you lost the tree and only have the roots. If all trunks are peach then the tree is from a seed and may not be worth saving. In the case that you find one trunk in the midst with peach leaves remove all others and begin to work with the one.

  • @faeriegardener84
    @faeriegardener84 Před 10 lety +1

    Bill, in your opinion, how would peach trees do in the Espallier style? I would like to do some fruit trees in a small space and was considering the most space effective styles of pruning...

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      I would say peach is an excellent choice for espalier. They need to be pruned heavier than all other fruit trees for production because they only fruit on wood grown during the previous year. This makes keeping them in the bounds of the trellis pretty easy. They also have very weak wood so tying them to a frame will help hold the tree together under fruit loads. The only negative I can think of is peach is susceptible to several fungus like peach leaf curl and mildew. If the espalier was against a wall the lack of air circulation might foster disease. Create an espalier that is free standing so the light and air can get to the foliage.

    • @faeriegardener84
      @faeriegardener84 Před 10 lety

      Very good info, thanks so much :) I don't have the land I'd like to, but I intend to make the most of it...which means compact growing situations for fruit trees :) Thanks again for your insight!

  • @ericslim1932
    @ericslim1932 Před 6 lety +1

    could those branches have been air layered ,say a month before printing?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 6 lety +1

      I believe the problem with that idea is the timing. You could air layer but the peach is pruned in winter and air layers on peach would not be ready to remove until around August or September. You have to remove 60% of last years growth every winter with peaches. Worrying about what happens to all that would could drive a man crazy. I just let it fall. If you are interested in making use of it the best idea would be grow some root stock using Myrobalan or peach pit seedlings then graft the branches to the root stock as soon as you are finished pruning the tree. I a couple years you will need to buy 40 acres just to plant all those trees!

  • @GreenGardenGuy1
    @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 12 lety

    @fryloc77 Thank you so much. I hope you can make use of the information.

  • @nelleaster8023
    @nelleaster8023 Před 10 lety +1

    I like your style lol I will be doing your technique. When should i prune ?

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      Thank you for the feed back. When you prune depends on where you live. If you live in the coastal area of Northern California, like I do, you had better get the shears out quickly because things are starting to grow. If you live in a cold winter area then you can wait a while. Peaches in cold climate regions are best left unpruned until the very tail end of winter. If you prune too early and get a severe freeze you may lose more wood to the cold. In warm winter regions we usually try to prune between late Oct. and early Feb.

    • @nelleaster8023
      @nelleaster8023 Před 10 lety +1

      Georgia here haha where we have experienced all four seasons in a week hahaha

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 10 lety +1

      Nell Easter It's been about 60 years since I lived in Georgia but I suspect you will be ready to prune as soon as the ice melt for a day or two.

  • @JeffBourke
    @JeffBourke Před 8 lety

    I am like your typical home owner. I don't have the courage to lop of so much nice wood but I don't mind if someone else does it!

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 8 lety +1

      +Jeff Bourke Good gardeners will approach pruning with courage. If you lack the confidence, then as you say, you are better off to leave the work to qualified professionals. I prune fruit trees for people all the time but with what that service costs them they could buy all their fruit in the farmers market and come off cheaper. Then again, I wouldn't have such a good job if everyone pruned their own orchard. Pruning is a meditation for me. It keeps me centered.

  • @josephdoran6116
    @josephdoran6116 Před 9 lety

    what time of the year is it best to prune my peach tree? I live in southern Indiana.

    • @GreenGardenGuy1
      @GreenGardenGuy1  Před 9 lety +1

      Because even Southern Indiana can get some pretty sever winter weather and peaches can be a bit tender I suggest pruning during the period where the worst of winter is over but spring hasn't come yet. For you that is probably between late Feb. and late March but you know your local climate better than I do. About three weeks before the break of the pussy willow is a good judge. If you prune in the beginning of winter and then get some sever arctic weather your peaches may get pruned a second time by the cold.