I have been wanting to add some espalier fruit trees to my yard and seeing two years worth of pruning was informative. I feel like I would be nervous to cut so much off, but it made sense after you did it. I would love to see a video of how it looks once it has bushed out in the summer. :)
Thanks a lot for the good explanation and the extra effort to wait/add the second years grothhandeling. Have a good harvest greetings from a to cold germany
Mine just has a bunch of almost even shoots all coming out around ground level. Is that a species difference kind of thing or can I somehow train it to be more tree-like than the current bush-like that I have going on?
Excellent content and very good instruction, great video and sound quality too.
That was perfectly explained, I am in year one with a fig doing this method and this cleared up all questions 👏
I have been wanting to add some espalier fruit trees to my yard and seeing two years worth of pruning was informative. I feel like I would be nervous to cut so much off, but it made sense after you did it.
I would love to see a video of how it looks once it has bushed out in the summer. :)
Excellent tutorial. Going to search your channel for a more recent update now.
The best video ever
Thank you. It would be really helpful to see how it looks when fruiting
Thanks a lot for the good explanation and the extra effort to wait/add the second years grothhandeling. Have a good harvest greetings from a to cold germany
This video is from 2021, interested to see how this fig tree trained so far? Can you make an update video please?
It would have been nice to have seen it in full bloom also.
Mine just has a bunch of almost even shoots all coming out around ground level. Is that a species difference kind of thing or can I somehow train it to be more tree-like than the current bush-like that I have going on?
Why do you left spurs. Isn’t new branches will grow from lateral in place where you left spurs?
Update?!?!?!?
فنان أحسنت استمر بالتوفيق.
Hello 🇷🇴
I don't follow how a post pounder is any more gentle than a hammer...
The laterals are too close .
japanese pruning, effectively, that's right!