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Getting to know the different parts of your fruit tree makes everything else about fruit growing much easier.

For example, fruit tree anatomy is a very useful thing to know before you start making any pruning cuts. You definitely don’t want to accidentally remove all the fruit buds with overzealous pruning.

Getting to know the different parts of a fruit tree was one of the things we loved when we first came home to the farm. It helped us to avoid some costly pruning mistakes!

Tips to spot fruit buds vs. leaf buds easily

If you do a lot of pruning like we do, it becomes very easy to spot the difference between different bud types. But if you’re only pruning occasionally it might be something you need to learn.

One of the mistakes we see regularly is people accidentally cutting fruit buds off. It’s very easy to avoid this problem with some clear pruning instructions.

So it’s important that you feel confident in identifying fruit buds, and spring is the perfect time to be on the lookout.

If you pay attention you’ll be able to watch the buds slowly wake up and then reveal either a leaf or a flower. And it all happens over the space of a few short weeks.

It’s also pretty important to understand the difference between limbs, laterals, and spurs.

Do fruit buds and leaf buds look different?

Learning how to tell the difference between leaf buds and fruit buds confuses a lot of fruit growers, especially beginners.

In fact, many new fruit growers are not aware of the buds on their fruit trees at all. They’re often amazed when we show them that there’s a bud at the base of every single leaf.

The best way we can explain buds is to show them to you.

A fruit bud on a peach tree. The bud is fat and furry on the outside, and is just opening up to reveal pink petals peeking out.
A fruit bud on a peach tree just starting to open up in spring

Some key differences to look for between leaf and fruit buds

Generally speaking, fruit buds are plumper and furrier than leaf buds.

Leaf buds tend to be slim, flat, and smooth.

It’s probably easiest to see this on peach and nectarine trees. The photo above shows a lovely fat and furry fruit bud on one of our peach trees. You can even see the pink flower petals showing through, which is a dead giveaway.

The apple shoot (below) also shows the difference. The terminal bud is a fat, furry fruit bud. Below that are leaf budsβ€”you can see clearly that they are much flatter.

Buds on a shoot in an apple tree. The end bud is fat and furry which shows it's a fruit bud and the buds along the shoot are flat and skinny, showing they are leaf buds.
An apple tree showing the terminal fruit bud and leaf buds

Peaches often have triple buds. These have a skinny leaf bud in the middle flanked by two fruit buds on either side, as you can clearly see in this photo.

A close up of the end of a shoot on a peach tree showing a triple bud, two fat flower buds on each side of a skinny leaf bud in the middle.

Buds on different types of fruit trees

The buds look a bit different on every fruit type. It’s harder to tell the difference between fruit buds and leaf buds on a pear tree, for example.

We’ve added coloured arrows to the photo of a pear tree (below) so you know what you’re looking at.

Fruit buds are identified with red arrows and leaf buds by blue arrows on this pear tree.
Fruit buds (red arrows) and leaf buds (blue arrows) on a pear tree

The red arrows indicate fruit buds and the blue arrows are pointing to leaf buds.

Even though it’s less distinct, you can once again see that there’s a clear difference in size and shape.

A horizontal shoot on a fruit tree with a blue arrow indicating leaf buds and red arrows pointing to fruit buds.


What is the difference between leaf and fruit buds?

The most simple explanation is that fruit buds produce flowers, which (usually) turn into fruit.

Leaf buds (which are sometimes called vegetative buds) grow leaves. Some of those vegetative buds may extend to become shoots. That’s why these buds are also sometimes called ‘growth buds’.

The shoots may remain as a bunch of leaves or may grow into spurs, laterals, or even branches. This depends on a few variables:

  • where they are on the tree
  • how you prune the tree
  • how vigorously the tree is growing
  • the type of fruit tree
  • the age of the tree

How are fruit trees like people?

Fruit buds (also sometimes called flower buds) contain embryonic flower parts. The flower is the reproductive part of the plant and contains lots of parts that can help you identify different fruit types.

Flowers contain both male and female parts. In some fruit types they’re in the same flower, in others they’re in different flowers.

Surprisingly, there are a lot of ways that fruit trees and people are similar.

The first is that fruit trees reproduce sexually. This means that the ovary (deep inside the flower) needs to be fertilised by pollen. Some trees are self-fertile, but usually for fertilisation to occur the pollen must come from a different variety altogether.

Why do some buds turn into fruit buds?

Branches or laterals that are horizontal are more likely to form fruit buds. Vertical wood on the other hand is more likely to develop leaf (or growth) buds. The buds on the end of lateralsβ€”called apical budsβ€”are likely to be fruit buds.

But what’s behind all of this?

Well, it’s all driven by hormones. It’s just one of the many things that fruit trees and humans have in common.

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