The Gardening Year for the Fruit Garden Liverpool

Growing fruit in your garden can be a fun and exciting challenge. If you're up to it, read on for some seasonal tips on how to grow and maintain fruit plants in your home garden.

Buckels Nursery Ltd
0151 5212060
Copplehouse Lane
Liverpool
Sandy Lane Nurseries
0151 5263232
27 Sandy Lane
Liverpool
Litherland Garden Centre
0151 9281400
27 Sefton Street
Liverpool
Rushton'S Nurseries
0151 9242365
Tanhouse Farm And Nurseries, Runnells Lane
Liverpool
C & D Garden & Pet Centre
0151 2283143
297 East Prescot Road
Liverpool
Liver Building & Garden Supplies
0151 5254080
11 Dunnings Bridge Road
Bootle
Ideal Landscape Suppliers
0151 9441964
Penpoll Trading Estate
Bootle
Stanley Gate Nursery
01695 725262
Ormskirk Old Road
Ormskirk
Sefton Meadows Home & Garden Centre
0151 5316688
Sefton Lane
Liverpool
Hartley'S Farm Shop & Nurseries Ltd
0151 5261577
Northway
Liverpool
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The Gardening Year for the Fruit Garden

The Gardening Year for the Fruit Garden

Spring

Throughout spring, keep buds and flowers protected from frost by using garden fleece or netting. This will also offer protection against birds. Peaches, nectarines and strawberries grown under cover will need to be pollinated by hand; vines may also need some help.

New vine shoots should be pinched out and disbudded, as should fans of stone fruits that have been grown under cover. Prune back branch leaders on trained trees. Bark-ring any apple or pear trees that are over-vigorous. Check supports and ties, and adjust where necessary.

New fruit trees should be planted by early spring at the latest, unless they are container-grown. Early spring is also the time to think about grafting apples, cherries, pears or plums from scions taken in winter.

Alpine strawberry seeds may be sown indoors, ready for planting out in early summer.

By late spring, fruit plants will benefit from mulching and feeding. Wall-trained fruit often need additional watering at this time of year. Place straw or leylandii clippings between strawberry plants to keep soil from splashing onto the setting fruits. Peg down strawberry runners in prepared ground, ready for transplanting in late summer. Clear away unwanted raspberry suckers, leaving four to six to each stool.

Sawfly lay their eggs on gooseberry bushes at this time of the year, keep a close eye out for them or the hatched caterpillars, as they can defoliate a bush in a matter of days. Spray with derris or remove affected leaves.

Summer

Throughout the summer, use netting to protect cherry trees and fruiting bushes and canes from the birds. Add a layer of mulch around trees and bushes to conserve moisture; feed as necessary.

In early summer, thin the fruits of apricots and peaches, and remove unwanted or weak canes from raspberries. Plant out new alpine strawberry plants, and water established strawberries well, pegging out runners if this was not done in late spring. Blackberries and hybrid berries may be tip-layered, or leaf-bud cuttings may be taken.

By mid summer, ensure that all fruit trees grown against walls receive regular irrigation whilst their fruits are swelling. Unwanted shoots should be removed from apricots, cherries, figs and plums so that the tree does not become over laden. Start training espalier and dwarf trees.

Trained apples, pears and pyramid plums should be pruned in late summer, and their fruit thinned if they have a heavy crop. Rooted strawberry runners may be planted out at this point, into ground that has been suitably enriched with old compost or manure.

Autumn

In early autumn, cut down the old canes of raspberries and blackberries as soon as the fruit has been picked to make room for the new growth. Tie in young canes.

Placing a cloche over established perpetual strawberries can keep them warm and fruiting for a little longer, although they must be watered regularly to ensure that they do not dry out. Cut...

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