Cutting cherry trees: timing & procedure

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When should you prune cherry trees? Is there a difference in pruning young and old cherry trees? How do you cut sour and sweet cherries? You can find out everything you need to know about correctly pruning cherries here.

Cherry tree is cut with secateurs
When pruning cherry trees, some peculiarities can be observed [Photo: Marina. Martinez / Shutterstock.com]

For many gardeners, there is nothing better than a cherry tree in their own garden. So that the tree brings many sweet or sweet and sour cherries, care is part of it: A cherry tree should be cut regularly so that the tree remains vital and presents itself in its full splendor can. But not every cherry tree has the same requirements: The larger, but lighter sweet cherries (Prunus avium) are usually much more vigorous than the smaller, mostly dark red sour cherries (Prunus cerasus) and therefore need a different cut. In this article we will tell you how to proceed with the cherry tree pruning and which differences you should pay attention to when cutting sweet cherries and sour cherries.

contents

  • When do you cut cherry trees?
    • When do you cut sweet cherries?
    • When do you cut sour cherries?
  • Cutting the cherry tree: instructions for the procedure
    • Pruning old cherry tree
    • Young cherry tree pruning
    • Cut the sour cherry
    • Cut the sweet cherry
    • Cut column cherry
    • Cut dwarf cherry

When do you cut cherry trees?

Cherries should be cut annually, as they do not tolerate a cut that is too rare and then radical.

When do you cut sweet cherries?

While most other fruit trees are pruned in late winter, a summer pruning is more suitable for sweet cherries. In the case of sweet cherries, the pruning takes place after the harvest, i.e. usually between the beginning of August and the end of September. The cut in summer dampens excessive growth, which is typical for sweet cherries. In addition, cuts heal better in warm and dry weather, so that the cherry tree is less susceptible to diseases.

When do you cut sour cherries?

Sour cherries tolerate the typical winter pruning between November and March very well, so they are pruned in the cold season like most fruit trees.

Cones on the cherry tree
Cherries are always cut on cones - so a stub remains [Photo: IBP Studio / Shutterstock.com]

Tip: Many gardeners are afraid that their cherry tree will lose vitality after being pruned. The best way to prepare the tree well for pruning is regular maintenance. Fertilize your cherry tree in the spring with a good, mainly organic one like ours Plantura organic universal fertilizer. You only need 50 to 150 grams of this, depending on the size. A healthy, well-cared for cherry tree can usually cope well with heavy pruning without any problems.

Cutting the cherry tree: instructions for the procedure

Pruning cherry trees is extremely important if you want to grow a vital, well-fruiting tree. It is important to think about your own tree and the goal of the cut before cutting:

How big is your cherry tree?

Vigorous varieties are stimulated to even stronger growth by regular pruning measures, but they tend to produce less fruit as a result. Weak-growing varieties may have to be stimulated to new shoots by the cut in order to produce enough fruit wood at all. It is therefore important to take the vigor into account when cutting the cherry tree. Weak growing trees are cut more radically than fast growing ones.

What effect does the thickness of the cut have?

Radical pruning measures stimulate vegetative growth, i.e. the formation of new shoots and leaves. They can therefore be useful if a tree hardly produces any new shoots and therefore no new fruit wood. Generative growth, i.e. the formation of new flowers and fruits, is also reduced by excessive pruning, and the tree then only reacts with the formation of more leaf mass.

How is the pruning carried out on the cherry tree?

With cherries, branches are not cut "on astring", but "on cones". Regardless of whether you want to remove a branch from the central shoot or derive it from a side shoot: it always will a stump at least 7 cm long was left, as cherries hardly overpower wounds, only "Dry back".

Which tool do you use?

From a certain size, cherries are primarily cut with a pruning saw or, better still, a fruit tree saw and rarely with a pair of rose shears. The reason for this is that whole branches and not just individual twigs are usually removed from the cherry tree. In any case, make sure that the tool is clean, sharp and rust-free. If the blade is dull or rusty, the interface can fray. If, on the other hand, the blade is dirty, the wound can become contaminated - both of which can make it worse Wound healing on the tree can lead to infection of the cut and should therefore definitely be prevented.

Cherry tree branch is cut with a saw
Cherries are mainly cut with a saw [Photo: Tatyana Andreyeva / Shutterstock.com]

How do you decide which branches to remove?

Sour cherries in particular tend to repeatedly produce unwanted dominant side shoots. To prevent this, you should systematically follow the cut when editing Branch thickness ratio Procedure: First, the trunk and the central shoot are viewed from bottom to top: If the trunk tapers at a point where a branch emerges, this branch is shortened. The following applies: the more the trunk tapers, the more the branch in question has to be shortened.
The whole thing can also be transferred to the leading branches attached to the trunk. If the guide branch becomes significantly narrower at one point, the outgoing side branch should be shortened accordingly. In this way, the desired main shoots and main branches are promoted and a beautiful crown is created instead of a chaotic shrub.

How does the cut of sweet and sour cherries differ?

Overall, sweet cherries and sour cherries differ significantly in theirs despite their close relationship Growth and are therefore pruned differently, which is why we will explain the different methods in more detail below will.

What is the aim of the cut?

A distinction is made between plant pruning, education pruning, maintenance pruning and rejuvenating pruning. All of these are explained in more detail below.

Summary: Important Principles of Cherry Tree Pruning

  • Adapt the pruning to the vigor: those of strong growth prune weaker than those of less vigor.
  • The stronger the cut, the more the tree reacts with vegetative growth. This can affect fruit formation.
  • Never cut on astring, but on cones.
  • Tends to cut more with a saw than with scissors. Remove whole branches instead of small twigs.
  • Prevent the development of too many dominant branches: Cut branches significantly, where the main shoot tapers off.
  • Sweet and sour cherries are cut differently.

Pruning old cherry tree

If an old cherry tree slowly begins to get old, i.e. it hardly grows, forms little new fruit wood and accordingly only bears sparsely fruit, it can with one Taper cut be animated to new growth. But be careful: Since the tree has to generate a lot of energy for new growth, the generative growth (i.e. the formation of flowers and fruits) is often less pronounced immediately afterwards. But don't worry - as soon as the vegetative growth flattens out after being excited by the cut, the tree's yields also increase significantly again. The steps for cutting an old cherry tree are as follows:

  1. In the old cherry tree, all dead or diseased branches are cut off on the cones.
  2. The main shoots are shortened to a quarter, overhanging scaffold branches cut back to young branches.
  3. Branches that grow inside the canopy or that cross each other are also removed.
  4. Avoid trunk wounds over 10 cm.
  5. In the case of heavily aged trees, extend the rejuvenation pruning for several years.

Rejuvenating pruning of old cherry trees is best done in late February. However, it is important to ensure that the old cherry tree is only cut in dry, mild weather, otherwise the wood can be damaged by frost.

Old cherry tree on meadow
Old cherries can be rejuvenated with a more powerful taper cut [Photo: Szuki / Shutterstock.com]

Important: With a radical rejuvenation cut, you can reactivate an old cherry tree. However, this very likely also shortens the life of the tree, because cherries cannot cope with such invasive interventions in the long term.

Young cherry tree pruning

Many gardeners believe that a young cherry tree does not need pruning. In fact, when you are young, you actually lay the foundation for a beautiful, even crown by cutting the cherry tree. Before pruning the plant, however, you must first decide on a crown shape: Sweet cherries are best closed Spindle or pyramid crowns, sour cherries raised to funnel crowns that support the multi-shoot growth to meet. Once you have made your choice, you will be able to use the cherry tree in the first year after planting Plant pruning laid the foundation for its later form. Proceed as follows:

  1. Determine central drive or several main drives depending on the desired crown shape.
  2. Select several branches evenly distributed around these leading branches as side branches, remove excess branches on cones. Ideally, the selected side branches should be at a 45 ° angle to the guide branch. Unfavorably positioned branches can be caused by the tall or Tie down in their stature can be corrected.
  3. Shorten the leading branches of the cherry tree by about a third, making sure that the leading branches are the same length. When raising the spindle or pyramid, the central shoot should be left significantly longer.
  4. Buds standing on top of the leading branches are removed.
Young cherry tree is tied
Binding is better for cherry trees than cutting them, because they are sensitive to the cut [Photo: Kevin Mozetic / Shutterstock.com]

But pruning a young cherry tree doesn't stop after pruning. Especially in very young trees less than 5 years old, the crown is still sparsely developed and needs to be encouraged to branch. This should be done at least 3 years in a row Upbringing take place. Proceed as follows:

  1. Shorten the central shoot and leading branches by a third. Make sure that all leading branches are about the same length and that the cut is made on an outward-facing leaf bud.
  2. Cut off branches of the leading branches that grow inward on the cones.
  3. Branches of the leading branches that grow outward are regularly trimmed to encourage branching.
  4. In the following years, when cherry tree pruning, the removed fruit wood is shortened to a tenon with about four eyes, from which new fruit wood can then develop.
  5. Side shoots placed at an angle on the main shoot can - if they arise at a suitable point - be tied at a 45 ° angle. Vertical shoots are removed on cones.

Cut the sour cherry

As with any cherry pruning, the above-mentioned principles of the Cherry tree pruning must be adhered to: Depending on the vigor, it is cut with a saw and with a view of the Branch thickness ratio, as described above. The aim of the pruning is to avoid the formation of an overly dense, bushy crown and to reduce it to a few desirable leading shoots in the funnel crown. The sour cherry is cut between November and March.
The differ within the Sauerkischen Morello cherries types from the Sweet custard type:

  • Morello cherries types only bear fruit on the annual shoots, so that the crown is quickly full of bare, worn shoots that do not bear fruit in the following year.
  • It is therefore essential to cut off or at least shorten every harvested shoot - this is the only way to ensure that enough new fruit shoots form for the coming year. As a rule of thumb: three quarters of the fruit shoots are cut back to at least a quarter of their length.
  • Remove sick, dead or very old wood and otherwise after Branch thickness ratio proceed to support the desired guiding instincts.
Sour cherries hang on a branch
Morello cherries only bear fruit on annual wood [Photo: Peter Vanco / Shutterstock.com]

When cutting the Sweet custard type you have to proceed differently:

  • Overall, the cutting of these sour cherries is considered less demanding, as they often develop a balanced mourning crown even without cutting.
  •  The sweet cherry differs from the morello cherries in that it can also form bouquet shoots and thus fruits on perennial wood.
  • For this reason, the sweet cherry is cut in a similar way to the sweet cherry.

Cut the sweet cherry

As with any cherry pruning, the above-mentioned principles of the Cherry tree pruning must be adhered to: The cut is made according to the vigor, with a saw and with a view of the Branch strength ratio. The aim of the cut is to maintain the dominance of the central shoot and to generate new fruit wood. Sweet cherries are cut after the harvest in summer.

In contrast to morello cherries, the sweet cherry develops most of its fruits on short shoots on its annual shoots and on the perennial bouquet sprouts. Because of this, a sweet cherry tree becomes too significantly more restrained cutin order not to remove the fruit-bearing wood:

  • In order to prevent the inside of the crown from becoming bald, the first priority when cutting sweet cherries is thinning Place: Inward-growing branches are cut back as well as heavily branched branches with overaged ones Fruitwood.
  • Younger branches with bouquet shoots, on the other hand, should be preserved and are only removed if they grow steeply upwards or if they cross with other branches. rub. By removing old fruit wood and preserving new ones, the so-called "floating around" of the Fruit wood achieved - because younger fruit wood provides higher quality, larger fruits than very old ones Fruitwood.
  • In addition, when pruning the sweet cherry tree, you should watch out for rotten, diseased or dead branches - these should also be removed.
  • Compared to the sour cherry, the sweet cherry has a stronger apical dominance, which means that it grows more tree-shaped by itself. Looking at that Branch thickness ratio competing, steeply upward striving side shoots should nevertheless be withdrawn.
  • In the case of sweet cherries, the summer pruning is particularly recommended in order to limit their strong growth.
Sweet cherry with bouquet shoots
The "bouquet shoots" of the sweet cherries get longer and longer over the years [Photo: Jan Gerhards-Ostehr / Shutterstock.com]

Info: The short, whorled side shoots of cherry trees are called bouquet shoots. These often have a particularly large number of flower buds and are therefore particularly important for a rich harvest.

Cut column cherry

If you don't have space for a large and sweeping cherry tree, you will be happy to use a column cherry: Because of its slender one Shape, this growth form of the cherry is ideal for smaller gardens or can even be planted in a large container will. So that the tree does not lose its elegant shape, the column cherry should be cut regularly. In fact, the pruning of a column cherry proves to be much less complicated than the pruning of its larger relatives. The column cherry does not have to be cut regularly, but only when necessary. When cutting column cherries you should proceed as follows:

  1. Cut back any side branches that are too long to 10 to 15 cm in length.
  2. Start well above an outward-facing eye.
  3. Remove sick, weak wood or wood that is growing steeply upwards.
  4. The central shoot is not trimmed in the first few years, but can be shortened afterwards if necessary.

Cut dwarf cherry

Especially for smaller gardens Dwarf fruit trees, like dwarf cherries, interesting because they do not require much space and can therefore be integrated even in confined spaces. But you also have to cut the mini cherry tree regularly. Since dwarf cherries were also raised as spindles, you hardly have to proceed any differently when pruning dwarf cherries than when pruning large fruit trees:

  1. If possible, all side branches should only be at a slight upward incline and should not be cut.
  2. Steep branches are diverted or tied down on an only slightly inclined shoot.
  3. Close, parallel branches are thinned out by removing one.
  4. Always cut branches above a bud on cones.
  5. The central shoot is shortened to about 30 cm above the last side shoot.
Dwarf cherry with ripe fruits
Dwarf cherries are especially good for small gardens [Photo: nazanines / Shutterstock.com]

In addition to pruning, fertilizing is another important maintenance measure for the cherry tree. You can find out how to do this in our article on "Fertilize cherry tree“.

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