At a glance
I’ve had the same pear tree on my plot for fifteen years now and I still feel a bit of a fool every January standing there with the secateurs wondering exactly where to start. It’s an odd feeling, cutting bits off something you’ve nursed along all year. But leaving it alone doesn’t do you any favours either, and once you’ve got the shape of it in your head the whole job is easier than it looks.
Pears want the same basic thing as apples from a prune, but they’re not quite the same tree, and if you treat them exactly as you would an apple you’ll miss a few things that matter specifically for pears. I’ll come to those.
Why a pear tree that never gets pruned will eventually let you down
Pears by their nature grow upward rather than out, more columnar than apples, more inclined to throw all their energy straight toward the sky. Left to their own devices they pack the centre of the tree tight with long vertical shoots, trap damp air inside the canopy, and make the fruit harder to get at every year. You can leave a pear tree unpruned for years and it’ll still give you fruit, but the haul will get smaller, more disease-prone, and increasingly high up where picking it without a ladder becomes a real problem.
Pruning diverts energy from all that upward growth into the fruiting spurs instead, and opening up the crown keeps air moving through the canopy. Canker is the worst thing a pear tree in this country runs into and it spreads fastest in dense, humid canopies with no airflow, so keeping the crown open is one of the more effective preventative things you can do.
The other thing worth saying upfront is that a pear tree takes to harder management than you might expect. Cutting it back makes it fruit better. A tree that looks a bit severe after pruning in January is usually the one doing best by September.
When to prune, and the conditions that matter more than the calendar
For a freestanding tree, a bush or a standard, winter is when it gets done. Any time between November and early March works, when the tree is dormant and the leaves are off and you can actually see the branch structure without peering through a canopy. January is what I aim for most years. Established trees start getting the full annual prune around four or five years after planting.
The calendar matters less than the weather on the actual day, and this is the bit people often miss. Cut into a pear tree during hard frost, anything below about minus five, and you split the wound open and expose the heartwood underneath. Cut in wet, humid conditions and you’re giving canker spores a welcome mat into every fresh cut you make. A dry, crisp morning is what you’re after.
Pear trees trained as restricted forms, espaliers, cordons, fans, pyramids, get a different treatment entirely: summer pruning rather than winter, starting from around late July. That’s earlier than apples, which don’t usually want summer pruning until mid to late August, and the timing for both is about ten days later if you’re in the north.
What you need before you start, and the one tool swap that’s worth making
Sharp secateurs for small growth, loppers for anything thicker you can’t get through cleanly, and a pruning saw for the sort of established branch that would leave the loppers doing a poor job. The difference between a clean cut and a ragged one matters: a clean cut heals over in a season, a ragged one sits there inviting trouble. I sharpen my secateurs at the start of the job and again after about two or three hours of active cutting, partly because blunt tools are harder work and partly because a bruised stem on a pear tree is an invitation for things you don’t want.
The type of secateurs matters more than the brand. Bypass secateurs cut like scissors, making a clean slice. Anvil secateurs crush the stem between a blade and a flat plate, which leaves a battered edge that heals slowly and can rot before it closes. If you’ve got anvil secateurs in the drawer, they’ll do the job, but if you’re buying new, bypass is what you want for this. Don’t bother with pruning paint. There’s a persistent belief that you should seal large cuts, possibly because you have to with plums and cherries which are vulnerable to disease through their wounds, but pears don’t need it and it doesn’t help.
A tripod or Japanese-style ladder is worth knowing about if you’re doing any work above head height. The three-legged version with adjustable legs stands on uneven ground without wobbling, which matters when you’re reaching into the top of a tree with a pruning saw. Eye protection is worth wearing too. Twiggy regrowth in the middle of a pear tree will find a way into your face if you let it.
How to actually prune a freestanding pear tree in winter
The shape you’re working toward is called the open goblet: an outstretched upturned hand with the fingers as branches, each one evenly spaced with nothing crowding the middle. About five main branches at the end of it, with the centre clear so light gets down to everything and air moves through freely. You can test how open your tree is by reaching into the centre: if you keep hitting branches and shoots it probably wants more thinning. And a point specific to pears: because of that strong upward habit, young trees often need ties or light weights on the main branches during the growing season to pull them down to somewhere around 55 to 60 degrees, otherwise the tree just grows straight up rather than spreading into a proper goblet shape.
Keep an eye on the pile of cuttings on the ground as you go. If it’s looking large, stop and come back next winter. Routine pruning should be removing around 10 to 20 per cent of the canopy. Push past that and the tree responds by throwing up watershoots, which is the name for the long, whippy, upright growth that comes from overpruning. They don’t fruit well, they look a mess, and they give you twice the work the following year. The same thing happens if you only prune the top of the tree in a sort of haircut approach, all the new growth erupts from the top and you end up with a dense thicket of non-fruiting shoots at the crown. Work around the whole tree evenly. If you do get watershoots, any in a useful spot can be shortened by about a third to encourage branching; the rest come out at the base.
No pruning paint needed. Pear trees don’t require pruning paint on their wounds, unlike plums and cherries which are prone to disease through fresh cuts. Skip it entirely.
Summer pruning for restricted forms, and what to do with an overly vigorous tree
Espaliers, cordons, fans, pyramids and spindlebushes want summer pruning rather than a winter prune to keep their shape. The timing for pears is from around late July, earlier than apples. Leave it later into September if growth hasn’t quite stopped. You’ll know the moment is right because the shoot tips will have formed a terminal bud and the stems will be firm along their lower third.
Things to watch for while you’re up there, and what to do with a neglected tree
Walking round a pear tree in winter with a sharp saw in your hand is a good time to notice things you wouldn’t catch when it’s in leaf. A few of these matter more than others.
If you’ve inherited an overgrown pear tree that hasn’t been touched in years, don’t try to sort it in a single winter. Spread the renovation over three winters instead of one, taking no more than roughly a third off in any given year. Think twice before cutting into any branch more than about 10 to 12cm across, those larger limbs are at risk of decay once cut and may not close over cleanly. If you have to take a big branch off, trace it away from the tree first and see if there’s a narrower fork or junction to prune at. Never leave a stub.
One thing that affects the fruit a pear tree produces, and that’s entirely separate from the pruning, is pollination. Most pear varieties need a compatible partner tree nearby to cross-pollinate in spring. If your tree flowers well but sets little fruit, it’s worth finding out whether the neighbour’s tree covers the same pollination period. Self-fertile varieties exist and don’t need a partner at all, which is useful to know if you’re planning a new tree in a garden without obvious neighbours.
Fifteen years in, my own tree isn’t perfect, there are angles I didn’t get right early on, a couple of spurs I probably let run too long, and years I’ve gone out in weather I shouldn’t have. It’s still giving me fruit every autumn, and it’ll give me fruit next year. The main thing pruning needs to be is consistent, not perfect.
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