How to prune a pear tree as a palmette espalier
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TL;DR
A palmette is a pear tree trained flat against a wall like a living sculpture: one vertical stem with horizontal branches extending left and right. This maximizes sun exposure, intensifies flavour and saves space. Prune three times yearly: winter pruning (January), early summer (May-June) and late summer (August-September).
What exactly is a palmette?
A palmette (espalier candelabra form) is a fruit tree trained flat against a support. The central stem grows vertically; lateral branches emerge at roughly 45-degree angles in a symmetrical candelabra-like pattern. This is not natural growth - it's active training through pruning, bending young wood and tying.
But the effort pays off. Full sun exposure delivers better-flavoured, sweeter pears. Space-efficient too, perfect for small gardens against a south or west-facing wall.
Why train to palmette?
Advantages:
- Maximum sunlight hits every fruit
- Economical use of garden space
- Easier harvesting than standard trees
- Decorative - a palmette on a white wall is living sculpture
- Better fruit quality and yield per square metre
Challenges:
- Intensive three-times-yearly pruning cycle
- 2-3 years training before full establishment
- Permanently tied to a vertical surface
The underlying system
A palmette starts with a young pear tree on dwarfing rootstock (Quince A or MC). Choose 'Conference', 'Doyenne du Comice', 'Beurre Hardy' or 'Vertel' - all compact and trainable.
Year One: train the central stem vertically. From emerging laterals, select carefully: one pair of opposite branches at about 30 cm height, another pair at 60 cm. Cut everything else back hard to two buds.
Year Two: gradually bend those lateral branches down and tie them to wires at 45 degrees. Bend gradually over weeks, never suddenly (snap risk).
Step 1: Preparation (November-December)
Check your wall first. You need:
- South, southwest or west-facing aspect (5-6 hours direct sun minimum)
- Horizontal wires or trellis at 30 cm spacing
- Good drainage
Plant in November-December during dormancy. Position the tree 20 cm from the wall (moisture control). Build a sturdy framework:
- Wooden battens as perimeter
- Horizontal copper or galvanized wires (rust-resistant)
- Soft binding material (jute, rubber ties, horticultural tape)
Step 2: Winter pruning (January-February)
Winter pruning sets the skeleton.
Years 1-2 (training phase):
- Remove laterals that don't fit the palmette pattern
- Let the central stem grow unimpeded
- Tip-prune selected laterals at 20 cm to encourage branching
Year 3 onwards (established palmette):
- Cut the central stem back to a bud above the top wire (usually 1.8-2.0 m)
- Cut lateral branches back to about 60 cm (retain 2-3 buds each)
- Remove dead wood, crossing branches and backward-facing growth
Step 3: Early summer pruning (May-June)
This is where the craft comes in. After leaf-break in May, vigorous new growth erupts everywhere.
What to identify:
- Leaf shoots: soft, green, grow from basal buds
- Flower buds: compact, brownish, look like tiny pine cones
- Waterspouts: aggressively vertical, thick stems
- Side-shoots: secondary growth from the main horizontals
Procedure:
- Leave all flower buds completely alone
- Cut vertical waterspouts back to two leaves above the base
- Trim side-shoots (secondary growth) back to two leaves
- Do this carefully, little and often - don't defoliate all at once
A mature established palmette warrants attention every 2-3 weeks in May and June.
Step 4: Late summer pruning (August-September)
After early pruning, new shoots regrow. In August, cut these new shoots back to a single bud. This iterative nipping creates a dense matrix of short, fruit-bearing spurs - exactly what you want.
Procedure:
- Spot new growth since last pruning
- Cut new shoots back to one bud
- Leave flower buds untouched
Step-by-step
Step 1: Select and prepare (November-December)
Choose Quince A pear on dwarfing rootstock, prepare wall with 30 cm wire spacing, plant 20 cm from wall.
Step 2: First winter prune (January, years 1-2)
Remove non-conforming laterals, select opposite pairs for horizontals, tip these at 20 cm.
Step 3: Subsequent winter prune (January, year 3+)
Cut central stem to top wire bud, laterals to 60 cm, remove dead and crossing wood.
Step 4: Early summer prune (May-June)
Cut waterspouts and secondaries to two leaves, preserve flower buds, repeat every 2-3 weeks.
Step 5: Late summer prune (August-September)
Cut all new regrowth to one bud, expose flower buds.
Step 6: Ongoing maintenance
Maintain the three-yearly cycle (winter, early summer, late summer) indefinitely. By year 4-5, expect 200-300 pears annually.
Best pear cultivars for palmette
- 'Conference': self-fertile, golden, very hardy, trains easily
- 'Doyenne du Comice': refined flavour, needs extra sun, compact growth
- 'Beurre Hardy': russet skin, high sugar, compact habit
- 'Vertel': early leaf break, forgiving to train
- 'Williams' Bon Chrétien': intensely sweet, early ripening, vigorous
Frequently asked questions
When do I see fruit?
Year 2-3 you get scattered small pears. By year 4-5, an established palmette yields 150-300 pears annually. Training does delay fruiting, but patience is rewarded.
Can I spot flower buds in May?
Yes. They were set the previous summer. In May they are visible: compact, reddish-brown, bumpy-textured. Leaf shoots are green and smooth. Always protect flower buds during pruning.
What if I accidentally remove a flower bud?
Not a catastrophe - you lose maybe 5-10 percent of next year's crop. Just be more careful in future; don't make it habitual.
How long does a palmette live?
30-40 years with good care. After 15-20 years, rejuvenating pruning (harder cutting) refreshes vigour.
Can I do a palmette on a north wall?
Officially no - too little sun. Pears need 5-6 hours direct sun for adequate sugar. Even 'Conference' turns sour and small on north aspect. Choose south, southwest or west.
Final thought
Palmette training is rewarding work - you become a sculptor of living fruit. After a few years, you own not just food but living art.
See how fruiting trees would look trained against your own wall on [gardenworld.app](https://gardenworld.app) - upload your photo and visualize trained pear espaliers in your space.
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