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ELEGANT EDIBLES: THE ART OF TRAINED FRUIT TREES

Kitchen Garden

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September 2025

Neat, productive and full of old-fashioned charm, trained fruit trees are a time-honoured feature of the kitchen garden. Martin Fish shares his expert advice on choosing shapes, training your own trees, and keeping them in good form for years to come

ELEGANT EDIBLES: THE ART OF TRAINED FRUIT TREES

For me, there is nothing nicer than picking fresh fruit from the garden, but as gardens tend to get smaller finding space for fruit trees can be a problem. The answer? Grow trained trees that take up much less space! They can be freestanding or grown against fences and walls, and they also look decorative.

Most fruit trees respond well to being trained into various shapes and designs. Apples and pears tend to be grown mainly as cordons, espaliers and step-overs, although they also make good fans. Stone fruits, such as plums, cherries, peaches and apricots, are mainly grown in a fan shape against a wall or fence. This method doesn't require as much pruning once established, which suits those fruits better.

TRAINED TREE TYPES

■ Cordon - A single-stemmed tree that has side shoots pruned back annually to create fruiting spurs. Oblique cordons are traditionally grown at 45° to help reduce vigour and to increase the length of fruiting wood, and vertical cordons are simply planted upright. Both types are planted 60-90cm (2-3ft) apart and are supported by horizontal wires.

image■ Espalier - A single vertical stem with horizontal branches growing from it. They have two, three or four tiers that are supported by wires on posts. The available space limits the spread of the horizontal branches, but normally it is no more than 2m (6ft) on each side of the main vertical stem.

■ Step-over - A type of espalier with one tier of horizontal branches growing on a short stem, approximately 30-45cm (12-18in) tall. These were popular in Victorian times along the edges of beds and borders in kitchen gardens.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Kitchen Garden

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MEET THE BLOGGER BUILDING A FOOD FOREST IN SCOTLAND

When Katrina and Peter moved to their East Ayrshire garden in 2019 they had no gardening experience – just a desire to live sustainably. Their food forest now feeds the family and supports their autistic son Clayton through the rhythms of nature

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

UNDER COVER

Summer crops are still producing harvests of tomatoes, cucumbers, aubergines and melons, but it is also time to start planting out transplants of the next season's vegetables in the same space. Fortunately, interplanting (also known as intercropping) works brilliantly, making the most of valuable undercover space and increasing the productivity of your plot.

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

Great grapes in any space

Whether you've got a greenhouse, a pergola or just a patio, grapes can thrive with the right pruning and care. David Patch shares expert tips for training vines and choosing the best varieties for every setup

time to read

4 mins

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Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

SOW NOW, EAT LATER!

This is the ideal time to plan and plant crops for bountiful harvests in winter and early spring. Emma O'Neill, head gardener at Garden Organic, shows you what's good to sow now, making the most of Organic September

time to read

5 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

DIGGING THE DIRT TO MULCH OR NOT TO MULCH, THAT IS THE QUESTION

This month John Holloway is in a quandary - does he do what he's always done with the soil on his plot, or give in to temptation and mulch?

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

WHAT'S NEW?

ALL THE LATEST NEWS, PRODUCTS & FACTS FROM THE WORLD OF KITCHEN GARDENING

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

ELEGANT EDIBLES: THE ART OF TRAINED FRUIT TREES

Neat, productive and full of old-fashioned charm, trained fruit trees are a time-honoured feature of the kitchen garden. Martin Fish shares his expert advice on choosing shapes, training your own trees, and keeping them in good form for years to come

time to read

4 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

GREEN GOLD

Are you still putting out your grass clippings for garden waste collection? Stop! says Benedict Vanheems. Here are some simple but highly effective ways to put them to fantastic use in the garden or on the allotment

time to read

7 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

SO HOW ORGANIC IS ORGANIC?

Garden Organic's Anton Rosenfeld discusses how you can be sure what you're doing in your garden is organic and not harmful to your soil or wildlife

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden

QUESTION TIME

GOT A FRUIT OR VEG PROBLEM? ASK KG FOR HELP

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

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