This is an excellent Apricot Pruning video. Thanks Ken. Not only does it advise what to prune, but where, how and why. A great set of concise explanations.
Been a few years since I last worked on an orchard, thanks for the video, it's actually a great refresher, and I probably learned more from your father than I ever did with the ho hum managers that use to run our orchards lol. Although we had some great managers to be fair to them.
Hi Ken great Video ,im off to do mine.. Ken i have a very large apricot tree that needs cutting back to a more manageable height .If i cut it back to about 2 meters will the tree shoot or do i need to graft it to get it to grow. cheers Peter
Hi Peter. Dad (Ken) says that if you're doing a Winter prune you can do a cut back to 2m. He used to paint any pruning cuts with a water based paint to seal the cut with any pruned branches that are finger thickness size or upwards. This is to prevent gummosis and also any bacterial spores forming on the cuts during winter time. Cheers, Steven
Ken (and son I presume), this is my favorite apricot pruning instructional. I'm in Northern California but appreciate your insights from Down Under! I have two 3-4 year old trees (apricot and pluot) fashioned using the Modified Central Leader Pruning Method. I didn't prune in the fall because the leaves stayed on the tree until well into the winter, then I thought it was too late. Now in February, the buds are beginning to flower too early (we've had unusual weather the past few years). Should I go ahead and prune now or leave the branches long and wild until the fall pruning season?
HI Karen. Thanks for your feedback. My Dad was an orchardist for many decades and this video was my chance to capture some of his knowledge for our future reference and memories. So I'm glad you found it useful too :). I asked Dad about your question and he says to still prune now because if you don’t then the branches will grow long in the spring/summer season and the weight of the fruits on those branches will quite likely cause it to snap, unless you don't prune but prop those long branches up to support the fruit. However Dad says that you'll then risk impacting the shape of the tree. If you choose not to prune and to keep the branches you’ll need to thin the fruit crop out to reduce the weight on the branches. Best time to thin the fruit is about 6 weeks before they’re due to be picked. then you can do a good winter prune next year. Hope that helps you. Cheers, Steven
Awesome video Mr "Dad"! Now I understand for the first time in my life how to do the apricot tree :-) The "frame " that you use there... is that some kind of plastic pipe?
I have an apricot tree that is getting close to 40 years old and has virtually never been pruned ever. It had always produced plenty of apricots but the last few years not so many. My question is can I give it an extreme cut back to bring it back to a more manageable height and size as it is probably 12 feet high ? Thanks 🙏
Thanks. But you really need to invest in some loppers! In your pruning explanations it would be good if you used measurements like "cut back to 200mm" rather than have to guess what lengths are required. Cheers
In the southern hemisphere here it can be done in June/July. Essentially it its timed while the tree is dormant and before the sap starts flowing as it emerges out of its dormancy. I'm not sure where you are located so I can't give exact month timings for you, but the above info should be a guide for your location, climate and timing of weather/seasons.
Great video. Is that an arid/hot area part of Australia? Reason I ask is I have an apricot tree in back of my house I just bought here in southern Arizona...
Hi Desert Mav. It's not an arid part of Australia although it can get up to 111F / 44C in the heat of summer. Rainfall is only about 12-14 inches per year. Cheers, Steven
ohh thats complicated.. once it fruits is that wood there for nothing or? to me it seems like you have to let tree grow to have new fruiting wood comming
Hands down best pruning video I have seen so far. Thanks
Thanks. I'll let Dad know your comments. He'll be chuffed.
Best Apricot pruning video on the internet - Many thanks to Ken.
This is an excellent Apricot Pruning video. Thanks Ken.
Not only does it advise what to prune, but where, how and why.
A great set of concise explanations.
Took me a while to find a good video like yours that actually explains where the fruiting wood is and strategies for pruning for future years
One of the best close up videos
Thanks Pa, you're a legend - that's the best pruning clip on youtube, Thank you.
Great instructional video on pruning apricots. Important to preserve the knowledge and skills involved.
This is the best you'll ever find on TH-cam...
Wow you taught a kiwi some good lessons, you can't beat years of experience. Hope your dad is doing well 🤩
Thank you. Dad is doing well. He's still doing the occasional pruning with us and doing well at 88 years old.
That was the most helpful video I've watched. Thank you for explaining as you go which will be fruit bearing this year and next. Wonderful!
The best pruning video I've seen
Great video, thankyou
Been a few years since I last worked on an orchard, thanks for the video, it's actually a great refresher, and I probably learned more from your father than I ever did with the ho hum managers that use to run our orchards lol. Although we had some great managers to be fair to them.
You should mention those pruning shears then put a link in the video description so maybe you can make a few extra bucks. Great video thanks guys
The best video on apricot pruning! Thank you.
thanks, excellent tutorial vid .. luv yer Pa's accent
Really good instructional video, I needed help with my tree and this is perfect, thankyou. Love amazing elders!
Extremely knowledgeable. Thank you for the wisdom
Very helpful! Excellent tutorial
Great informative video.I will put into practice this coming winter. Thanks Ken
Legend Pa. Best explanation
Really great informative video - thanks Ken!
Thanks very much for this video. It explained a lot that I needed to know and I appreciate it.
Excellent video! Thanks gramps!!
WOW 😳😲👍 never too old to learn,❤ I like
Great job. What is the best time of year to prune.
Winter is the best time for a prune like this.
Great video. Good explanation as you go. Thanks!
Great video , thanks so much for sharing
Thanks for your help
Thanks for the knowledge! from Canada where my citrus greenhouse will try rooting apricots this spring.
Ooooooou … what a sweet looking dad
Hi Ken great Video ,im off to do mine.. Ken i have a very large apricot tree that needs cutting back to a more manageable height .If i cut it back to about 2 meters will the tree shoot or do i need to graft it to get it to grow.
cheers Peter
Hi Peter. Dad (Ken) says that if you're doing a Winter prune you can do a cut back to 2m. He used to paint any pruning cuts with a water based paint to seal the cut with any pruned branches that are finger thickness size or upwards. This is to prevent gummosis and also any bacterial spores forming on the cuts during winter time. Cheers, Steven
That was awesome guys, thanks for the demo:)
Beautiful and useful video thank you
This is such a informative video, learnt heaps! Cheers.
Very good video..thanks
Ken (and son I presume), this is my favorite apricot pruning instructional. I'm in Northern California but appreciate your insights from Down Under! I have two 3-4 year old trees (apricot and pluot) fashioned using the Modified Central Leader Pruning Method. I didn't prune in the fall because the leaves stayed on the tree until well into the winter, then I thought it was too late. Now in February, the buds are beginning to flower too early (we've had unusual weather the past few years). Should I go ahead and prune now or leave the branches long and wild until the fall pruning season?
HI Karen. Thanks for your feedback. My Dad was an orchardist for many decades and this video was my chance to capture some of his knowledge for our future reference and memories. So I'm glad you found it useful too :).
I asked Dad about your question and he says to still prune now because if you don’t then the branches will grow long in the spring/summer season and the weight of the fruits on those branches will quite likely cause it to snap, unless you don't prune but prop those long branches up to support the fruit. However Dad says that you'll then risk impacting the shape of the tree.
If you choose not to prune and to keep the branches you’ll need to thin the fruit crop out to reduce the weight on the branches. Best time to thin the fruit is about 6 weeks before they’re due to be picked. then you can do a good winter prune next year.
Hope that helps you.
Cheers, Steven
Great clip. Thanks 🙏❤️. What’s the pruning shears brand he’s using if you share 🙏
Awesome video Mr "Dad"! Now I understand for the first time in my life how to do the apricot tree :-) The "frame " that you use there... is that some kind of plastic pipe?
Thanks Marise.Yes its a poly plastic pipe. Happy gardening!
I have an apricot tree that is getting close to 40 years old and has virtually never been pruned ever. It had always produced plenty of apricots but the last few years not so many. My question is can I give it an extreme cut back to bring it back to a more manageable height and size as it is probably 12 feet high ? Thanks 🙏
good video.
When is the best month to prune in Ohio? I have heard not to prune in late winter, but I am not sure?
Thanks. But you really need to invest in some loppers! In your pruning explanations it would be good if you used measurements like "cut back to 200mm" rather than have to guess what lengths are required. Cheers
what month do you do this in relative to winter...
In the southern hemisphere here it can be done in June/July. Essentially it its timed while the tree is dormant and before the sap starts flowing as it emerges out of its dormancy. I'm not sure where you are located so I can't give exact month timings for you, but the above info should be a guide for your location, climate and timing of weather/seasons.
Great video. Is that an arid/hot area part of Australia? Reason I ask is I have an apricot tree in back of my house I just bought here in southern Arizona...
Hi Desert Mav.
It's not an arid part of Australia although it can get up to 111F / 44C in the heat of summer. Rainfall is only about 12-14 inches per year.
Cheers, Steven
Would you please tell me what that hoop looking material is? That's for laying frost cloth isn't it? I would like to purchase some for my apricots.
Its a plastic poly pipe and is mostly used for placing bird netting over it to keep the birds out so they don't eat the fruit.
ohh thats complicated.. once it fruits is that wood there for nothing or? to me it seems like you have to let tree grow to have new fruiting wood comming
Oh man, after watching this video, I now realized I didn't do my pruning right. Hope next year will be ok.
Rootstock apple?
more vids please
When to cut, autumn or spring?
During winter is the best time.
@@WGFS1 Thanks a lot
Which wood z fruiting wood ?
The one with exploding cluster type