Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat

Growing => General Gardening => Topic started by: Sleepingpopman on April 15, 2018, 22:01

Title: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: Sleepingpopman on April 15, 2018, 22:01
Hello folks  :) We bought 3 patio fruit trees, a Red & a Green apple & a pear about 3 years ago & put them huge tubs, for the last 2 years all 3 have blossomed & the 2 apples have fruited but not the pear. We have just had our garden altered & now have the perfect place to put them in the ground. Q1. Is it too late to transplant now ? Q2. If we do will we loose this years fruit ? Q3. Any idea why the pear isn't fruiting ?
Keith/Sharon
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: londongardener on April 18, 2018, 12:38
What type of pear is it?  A lot of pear species are not self fertile and are less common that apple trees so that could be the problem
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: londongardener on April 18, 2018, 12:39
PS I think normally you only move fruit trees when they are dormant so if you do then you will lose the fruit.
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: Debz on April 18, 2018, 12:47
I've had a pear for 5 years now.  It's only in the last two years that it's started to flower and last year we got a tiny pear.  Pear's take a few years to get established enough to even flower apparently.  Can't remember where I got this info from but it was when I was threatening my little tree with the chop if it didn't get it's act together. 
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: Sleepingpopman on April 18, 2018, 23:12
many thank's for your replies about our problem patio pear tree  ;). londongardener the label say's it's a Lillyput, can't find anything about it anywhere  :( , We did think it was not a good idea to move now but we thought we would ask. & Debz the tree came into FULL bloom last year when it was 4 years old (no fruit) & it looks like it's going to be full of bloom again this year  :nowink:
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: londongardener on April 19, 2018, 09:19
many thank's for your replies about our problem patio pear tree  ;). londongardener the label say's it's a Lillyput, can't find anything about it anywhere  :( , We did think it was not a good idea to move now but we thought we would ask. & Debz the tree came into FULL bloom last year when it was 4 years old (no fruit) & it looks like it's going to be full of bloom again this year  :nowink:
It is self fertile according to this
https://www.jparkers.co.uk/pear-lilliput-0001164c
Title: Re: Patio Fruit Trees
Post by: grinling on April 20, 2018, 14:23
From another website
Normally, lack of cropping would imply that the soil is very fertile and tree is growing rapidly while the growing is good!

5-10 years for a dwarf pear to start cropping is not uncommon.

If the tree is growing strongly and you want fruit rather than growth, then I suggest:

1. Stop feeding.

2. Stop watering, unless it starts to really suffer in a severe drought.

3. Consider a hard prune of all the young green shoots in July-August, back to about two inches. It might be a bit late now to have an effect for next year. Don't cut into older wood while summer pruning - only young wood.