Columnar fruit trees - cultivation, varieties, pruning, price

Column fruit trees are a new trend that appears not only in our gardens, but also on balconies. They are dwarf fruit trees that yield the same abundant but slightly different appearance.They grow to a height of 2-3 meters, and their circumference is about 80 cm.They are therefore an ideal solution for small areas in gardens, as well as for the previously mentioned balconies or terraces. They can be grown in pots on closed surfaces, because by properly pruning and caring for them, you will grow a fruit tree of the right size and fit in the desired area, giving you tasty and good-looking fruit.In the gardens, we can plant them already at a distance of one meter, which will allow us to increase their number and fill the surface with useful varieties.

Contents:

  1. Column fruit trees - varieties
  2. Columnar fruit trees - cultivation
  3. How to prune column trees?
  4. Fruit trees - price

Column fruit trees - varieties

There are several fruit varieties of columnar trees. Starting with apple trees, ending with plums. Columnar apple trees are characterized by a compact and narrow crown and fruit growing on short vertical twigs. The most popularcolumnar apple trees are the Mezo, Polka, Flamenco, Bolero varieties

Cherries look like apple trees, where the fruit grows on raised shoots. The leading varieties includecherry Victoria, Silva, Queen Mary and Star Gold Columnar pears grow slightly differently than previous species. They bear fruit on long shoots, i.e. long branches that look almost like bent at right angles.

The most popularcolumnar pear varieties include Decora and SaphiraPlums, similarly to pear trees, bear fruit on long shoots. The most famous varieties are Imperial and Fruca. Among the columnar plants, you can also find unique varieties such as Miracose plum-apricot.

Columnar fruit trees - cultivation

Fruit columnar trees should be planted in a sunny place. This is good for the quality of the fruit. In a sunny place, they will be ripe and juicy. When planting trees, it is worth mixing the fertile soil with compost. In this way, we enrich the soil with minerals and improve its structure. It is worth fertilizing the tree columnar cuttings in spring, because watering the substrate sterilizes the soil from the nutrients needed for growth. These trees usually bear fruit in the second year after planting them in the ground.Pillar trees for the garden are self-pollinating.

How to prune column trees?

Fruit columnar trees do not require any special pruning. This is due to the fact that they do not grow to large sizes, and their branches grow back from the trunk as shoots directed upwards or long shoots hanging downwards. Unlike other varieties of fruit trees, you do not need to shape their crowns, and pruning does not support their excessive growth. You can, of course, like any fruit tree, cut branches that are damaged, frozen, and branches that have dry tips.

Corrective cuts also have little effect on branch growth.A very important procedure supporting the proper growth of dwarf fruit trees is bending the shoots that grow out of the guide diagonally upwards.All shoots should grow at an angle close to right. To bend them, you can use the most ordinary clamps, the same as those used for washing.In addition, it is worth taking care of thinning out the fruit buds. Columnar trees can bloom profusely, but cannot feed that much afterwards. This will make the fruit smaller, but the fruit left alone will be more plump and tastier.

Column fruit trees - price

Our garden or balcony can look beautiful through fruit columnar trees without much effort. You can find them in garden stores, at the nearby bazaars and markets, as well as in supermarkets.The prices of trees range from a dozen to several dozen zlotys.The price depends on the type of tree, as well as the place where we buy them. In supermarkets and large stores, we will get them at lower prices, but we are not sure how they were stored and whether they will be used. It is worth buying column trees from proven suppliers, i.e. in gardening stores, where we can find out where they come from and we can be sure that the employees take care of them, as well as directly from producers, i.e. in bazaars or from nearby nurseries.

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