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Removing fruit tree suckers is an important part of pruning your fruit trees. They’re sometimes called watershoots, but in fact watershoots are something different entirely.

Pruning is one of the 5 key fruit care jobs. Whether you’re pruning in summer or winter (or any other time for that matter), removing suckers is an important part of the job. So we thought we’d share some tips about how to remove them properly.

What’s a sucker?

Good question! Suckers are shoots growing from below the graft union on your tree. Sometimes they’re growing directly from the roots and coming up through the soil near the trunk of the tree.

Most fruit trees have been grafted. This means that shoots from below the graft union are growing from the rootstock, rather than from the variety.

Watershoots are something different. Just like suckers they are strong, vertical shoots, but watershoots grow from above the graft and need dealing with differently.

Why should you always remove fruit tree suckers?

There are three very good reasons why you should always remove these shoots from your fruit trees.

It’s often better to illustrate these things rather than talk about them. Suckers are pretty common, so we have lots of photos from our orchards to demonstrate what we’re talking about!

This photo shows the first reason why this is so important:

Two fruit tree suckers are almost as big as the original trunk in this tree.
A young plum tree (in the centre) is dominated by 2 suckers on either side

Can suckers get as big as the tree?

This is a little plum tree with two suckers coming up from the roots. Notice how they’re pretty much the same diameter as the original tree? In just one year, both suckers have grown taller than the tree.

Just imagine, for a minute, what this scenario would look like in another year or two if the suckers were left intact.

Within a very short space of time, the original grafted tree would become increasingly difficult to distinguish. In fact, the suckers would likely out-compete the original tree, increasing its chances of dying.

If you have a multi-trunked fruit tree in your garden, this is one of the common explanations for how it got there.

Here’s another example that shows just how much stronger suckers often are than the grafted tree:

A fruit tree sucker growing up the centre of a small apricot tree has grown much taller than the tree.
A fruit tree sucker can quickly grow taller than the tree

How to avoid making the problem worse

That brings us to the second reason for getting this technique right.

When you’re removing suckers, make sure you take them off as close to the trunk or the ground as you possible can.

This can be quite tricky to do with your secateurs If they’ve already grown very large. The one in the photo below is probably on the edge of what’s possible. You may need to get out the pruning saw, or even the chainsaw!

Remove fruit tree suckers with secateurs as low to the ground as possible. Try not to leaving any stub at all.
Always try to remove suckers without leaving any stub at all

Fruit tree suckers tend to be persistent and come back every year anyway.

If you leave a stub, you’re just asking for trouble. This is effectively pruning it off with a heading cut.

The likely result?

It’s pretty much guaranteed to branch. Don’t be surprised if you come back next year and find that one sucker has turned into a forest.

A sucker has been removed incorrectly from this fruit tree. A forest of small suckers is now growing from the base of the tree.
A sucker that’s removed incorrectly can lead to a forest of suckers the following year

Keep your garden safe from fruit tree suckers

The third excellent reason to remove suckers is because they can be quite dangerous.

Many rootstocks are quite thorny. Because the suckers grow so vigorously, the thorns can quickly become really strong and vicious.

Here’s one we prepared earlier.

Fruit tree suckers can have big vicious thorns up to 5cm long (or even longer), making them dangerous to work with.

There are a few reasons why they form major hazards in your garden.

The one we’ve photographed here had grown more than 2 metres tall in just one season. It had also grown right up through the tree. This not only takes much-needed vigour away from the tree but provides a potentially painful hazard when you’re thinning, picking, or pruning.

How to dispose of suckers

Be very careful with how you dispose of suckers once you’ve cut them down. Make sure you put them well out of harm’s way.

Don’t leave them where they can be driven over. They can easily puncture even a tractor tyre (and yes, that’s the voice of experience!)

Particularly make sure you don’t leave them lying where someone might accidentally step on one. Those thorns can be sharp and strong enough to penetrate most shoes, including sturdy work boots.

And you definitely don’t want to experience a puncture wound from them. These wounds can be as painful and problematic as severe insect stings.

Can you replant fruit tree suckers?

Yes, sometimes. We’ve done it many times, and in fact we dig up cherry suckers every year for use in Carr’s Organic Fruit Tree Nursery.

If the sucker is growing from under the soil (as opposed to straight out from the trunk) it may have roots on it. Excavate the soil carefully around the sucker to have a look.

If there are roots, dig a bit deeper, then cut off the sucker with as many roots as possible. Plant it straight away and water it in. It will make a fantastic rootstock to get you started on a grafting adventure!



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