It’s easy to get apple, pear and other fruit trees into good shape if you follow a few simple guidelines. Pruning twice a year, in winter and summer, will keep them productive and healthy. In the video above, Monty Don demonstrates how to prune an apple tree in winter, and which stems to cut back.

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Without pruning, they can become straggly and less productive. Cutting back branches and shoots in the dormant season will concentrate sap flow in spring into fewer buds, resulting in strong growth. By contrast, summer pruning limits vigour by removing nitrogen-rich young growth, and will promote flower and fruit formation.

So, in the early years of a fruit tree’s life, when you want it to grow strongly to create a sturdy framework of branches, it’s vital to prune in the dormant season. Once it has reached the required size and shape, most of the pruning can be done in summer.

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