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Ripe Conference pears hanging on branch, golden-yellow ripened with red blush
Planting24 May 20268 min

Conference pear tree pruning: guide for this popular self-fertile cultivar

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TL;DR: Conference pear pruning

Conference is self-fertile and grows wider than other varieties - plan for 3.5-4 m width at maturity. Formation similar to standard (3-4 primary branches), but Conference always bears heavily on lateral twigs - so summer pruning (July-August) is nearly mandatory to prevent yield decline. Timing: major winter pruning March, summer prune late July when you see < 3 cm fruit.

Conference: self-fertile and wide growers

Conference is the garden pear in Belgium, Netherlands and northern France. Reasons: self-fertile (no second tree needed), reliable bearer from young (years 4-5), and large golden pears with soft flesh. But Conference grows wider and more compact than e.g. Williams or Doyenné, and always bears somewhat on lateral twigs - meaning summer pruning is far more important than with other varieties.

Conference feels different from spread-growth types: where Williams grows short and tight, Conference shoots wide. This is not bad - it is the cultivar's nature. But it requires different pruning management.

Forming Conference: same base, different final shape

Years 1-3 follow the same steps as other pears:

  • Year 1: clear trunk, select 3-4 primary branches at 40-100 cm height, head central 20-30 cm
  • Year 2: extend primaries 30-40 cm, remove inward laterals, consolidate form
  • Year 3: develop secondary branches, build open crown

But now the goal is different. Where you aim for 2-2.5 m x 2 m width for Williams or Doyenné, set Conference to 2.5-3 m height x 3.5-4 m width. Width is the difference. Conference wants to expand - you must give it space, not fight it.

Space: so don't plant Conference tight against your boundary or fence. Allow at least 3.5 m free side. Forcing Conference into 2 m width means constant summer pruning and lower crops.

Summer pruning: Conference's secret

This is where Conference deviates from other pears. While many pears do well with winter pruning alone, Conference bears better under a summer-pruning regime.

Why? Conference forms quite a few short laterals (fruiting spurs) growing directly from 2-3 year old wood. If you don't head these back in winter, they grow out the following summer into longer shoots - with less fruit. Summer-pruning these laterals short (10-15 cm) means the plant invests energy in terminal buds (where next year's flowering sits).

Schedule:

  • March: major winter pruning (extend primaries, remove big inward-growing, structure work)
  • May-June: don't touch yet
  • Late July through August: SUMMER PRUNE once you see the first full growth flush is done

Summer pruning Conference step by step:

  1. Find all new growth of this season (green, soft, much darker green than last year's wood)
  2. Growth that is > 15 cm and > 3 mm diameter: cut back to 10-15 cm, just above a leaf cluster
  3. Growth that is < 10 cm and < 2 mm: leave it (natural fruit spurs)
  4. Remove inward-growing new shoots entirely (no future)
  5. Clear dense packs where you can't see light through

Summer pruning Conference feels counter-intuitive (you're cutting off growth you just ripened), but the difference in next-year bearing quality is 30-40% better.

Forming Conference in practice: years 4-10

After year 3 basic formation, years 4-10 are maintenance:

Years 4-5: First full bearing

Conference now bears light (5-10 kg). Pruning management:

  • March: light heading of primaries (15-20 cm), remove inward-growing laterals
  • August: summer prune (see above) - ESSENTIAL

Many growers skip summer pruning and see a dip in year 5 to 5-7 kg instead of 12-15 kg. Not because the tree weakened, but because lateral twigs from last season don't bud well with flowers.

Years 6-10: Maintenance phase

Yield stabilizes at 20-30 kg/year. Pruning management:

  • March: light heading (10-15 cm), only remove truly inward-growing and diseased/damaged
  • August: summer prune (standard regime)
  • Only if needed: extra between-season pruning (diseased/damaged only)

With Conference it's tempting to prune less in this phase. That works against you: less summer pruning = more yield-dip years. Maintaining summer-pruning regime gives stable 25-30 kg/year until year 12+.

Conference-specific issues

Yield decline (years dip in 5, 8, 10)

Conference shows natural 2-3 year cycle: good year, less, less, reset. This is genetic. You cannot prevent it, but summer pruning reduces dips from 50% down to 20-25%. So even "off" years you still get 15-20 kg.

Russetting (skin roughness)

Conference naturally forms small brown cracks in the skin (russetting). This is cosmetic (fruit is fine), but undesirable for market. Russetting increases with:

  • Early frost damage (May-June, against growth) - nothing you can do
  • Excess nitrogen - so moderate feeding after year 4
  • Very dry/wet moisture regime - water regularly in dry years

Pruning doesn't directly prevent russetting, but good air circulation (summer prune dense packs) helps slightly.

Watersprouts after hard pruning

If you cut Conference back hard (> 50%), she readily forms watersprouts. Avoid harsh winter pruning. Summer pruning is preferred (gentler, more distributed).

Step-by-step plan

Step 1: Planting site prep

Ensure your Conference has at least 3.5 m free side space (not tight to boundary). Full sun, moderate moisture, good drainage. Harvest-sight planning: Conference grows wide, so don't crowd other shrubs within 3 m radius.

Step 2: Year 1 formation (March, first growing season)

Follow standard pear formation: clear trunk 70 cm, select 3-4 primaries at 40-100 cm height evenly distributed, head central 20-30 cm. No Conference-specific differences in year 1.

Step 3: Years 2-3 basic formation (March, second and third growing seasons)

Year 2: extend primaries 30-40 cm, lateral cleanup. Year 3: develop secondary branches, build open crown. Already plan for 3.5-4 m width (Conference will naturally go there).

Step 4: Year 4+ maintenance with summer pruning

March: light heading (10-20 cm primaries), remove inward/diseased, no hard work. August: summer prune - new growth 2-3 years old, > 15 cm and > 3 mm diameter down to 10-15 cm, inward growth gone. Don't over-prune (not > 30% new growth). Repeat yearly.

Step 5: Monitor yield-decline cycle

After year 5: if you see a weak year, mark on calendar (note "yield-dip year N"). Bearing cycle is usually 2-3 years. Next year you can expect bearing to rebound. Continuous summer pruning helps flatten peaks.

Frequently asked questions

Can I grow Conference without summer pruning?

Technically yes, but yields drop 30-40% and become irregular. You get years of 18-20 kg and years of 8-10 kg instead of consistent 25 kg. For home gardeners, summer pruning is nearly essential.

How large does Conference get?

Conference reaches maturity around year 10-12. Then 2.5-3 m tall, 3.5-4 m wide. Planting distance therefore 4 m x 3.5 m minimum, better 5 m x 4 m if you have extra space.

Conference stays compact? What am I doing wrong?

You're probably pruning too hard. Conference grows WIDE - that is normal. If you cut Conference hard to keep her compact, you form watersprouts and weaken the tree. Better: plant with 3.5 m clearance and let her expand.

When does Conference stop bearing?

Conference bears until year 25-30 reasonably well (50-60% of peak), then slowly declining. After year 20 you can consider renewal pruning (replace whole branches), but usually replacing with a young tree is more appealing.

Do I need to hand-thin Conference fruit?

If you have > 30 kg pears, yes. Thin in June to 1 pear per 10-15 cm twig (remove other pears when still small, ± hazelnut size). This gives larger pears (250-300g instead of 150-200g) and better next-year flowering. Without thinning you get many small pears.

Harvesting Conference and yields

After good pruning (including summer pruning) Conference bears:

  • Years 4-5: 5-10 kg
  • Years 6-10: 20-30 kg yearly
  • Year 10+: 25-35 kg reasonably stable

Conference ripens October-early November. Clip (don't pull) pears off gently when they are golden and slightly swollen. Within a few days at room temperature they ripen further and get that classic softness.

On [gardenworld.app](https://gardenworld.app) you can upload a photo and see how a mature Conference pear tree (years 8-10, laden with fruit, golden-yellow) with surrounding bloom structure would transform your front garden. Conference grows visibly fast - after 3-4 years you see substantial fruit already.

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