Whacked back the weeds, pruned off a bunch of suckers and gave it a good mulching of old chicken shit and rotted straw.
Judging from that 6 foot ladder the pear tree is roughly 12 feet tall now, certainly getting hard to pick the high fruit. I’m wondering if I shouldn’t cut off those high vertical branches before I put the fence back. Maybe it’ll branch out more, get wider rather than higher.
It is common practice to spread pear branches by tying 1/3 back from the tip and running a line to a fence or a rock. The goal is to have the branches at about 45 degree angles.
Joel, you can prune the top verticals this fall. Try to cut them just above a jointed section, and that way two new branches may sprout, filling in the central area. We tried tying off branches to create less vertical branches, but found just keeping the verticals topped encouraged slaunchwise growth. But tying off seems to work better for some people.
There are inexpensive fruit tree harvesting poles (basket on a stick, basically) which would let you harvest the pears without using a ladder. Myself, I like to avoid ladders as much as possible.
Or you could always go adventurous and get stilts!
“ go adventurous and get stilts!”. That shouldn’t be so terribly adventurous for Joel. After all, he normally walks around on one stilt anyhow, so he is already halfway there!
Yeah, Ben, but a “double-stilt” is exceptionally adventurous!
Nice, good on you for beating the pests to the booty.
Yes prune.
I had a branch break and picked a full 5 gal of green pears here.