Fruit Trees with No Fruit
Written by Ron Vanderhoff

Do you have a fruit tree in your garden, but no fruit in your garden? You’re not alone. I am amazed how many gardens share this dilemma. Year after year, gardeners press on, hoping for some sort of magical fruit tree transformation.
Why do some fruit trees grow strong and healthy, but not fruit?
Reason #1: It’s the Wrong Variety for the Climate
Reason #2: It’s Seed Grown
This is incredibly common with avocados, since pits of particularly tasty avocados are easily planted. Twenty years later the tree is enormous and beautiful, but has never produced a single fruit. Avocadoes, stonefruits, citrus and almost all other fruit trees are hybrid plants. They don’t replicate the characteristics of their fruit through their seed. Not only is planting the seed a roll-of-the-dice, but there is no rootstock underplanting on a seed grown tree. It’s always best to buy a grafted, vegetatively produced tree from a reputable source.
Reason #3: It’s Too Young
Many fruit trees may not produce fruit when young. The time between planting and bearing will vary with the tree type, variety and rootstock. This issue is especially true of trees like avocados, macadamias, and several tropical fruits. Also, trees grafted onto dwarfing rootstocks generally will begin bearing a year or two earlier than their full size cousins. Citrus usually bear fruit right away. Peaches and nectarines, which bear fruit directly on their branches, usually fruit within one to three years from planting. Apples, pears, apricots and plums, which set their fruit on little perennial stubs called spurs, may take 3 to 4 years to bear fruit. Avocados may take five to eight years.
Reason #4: It’s Unhealthy or Too Old
Unhealthy trees may bear poorly, if at all. Root rots, boring insects, crown galls, oak root fungus and other maladies are almost invisible to the untrained eye, but can put so much pressure on the tree that its fruit is almost completely sacrificed. Tree health begins early, with proper placement in the garden, well-drained soil, full sun and compatible plants nearby. Shade, often caused by overcrowding, reduces flowering and fruiting considerably. Old trees often fruit poorly, due to their lack of vigor and the onset of internal diseases and pests.
Reason #5: Poor Culture
Cultural practices for good tree health include cultivating or mulching to reduce weed competition for nutrients and water. Fertilize early each spring and summer with an organic fertilizer and mulch as needed. Water deeply and infrequently, soaking the entire root system but keeping the trunk primarily dry, instead of brief frequent bursts from overhead sprinklers.
Reason #6: It was Poorly Pollinated or Needs a Pollinator
Many varieties, including most plums, pluots, plumcots, almonds, apples, pears and a few citrus require cross pollination from a variety that blooms at the same time, with compatible pollen. These "self-unfruitful" varieties cannot produce fruit themselves – they need a mate.
Reason #7: It Produces Fruit in Alternate Years
Some fruit trees, especially avocados, apples and apricots, are alternate bearing - they bear heavily one year and little the next. This tendency can be negated somewhat with early and judicious fruit thinning during the heavy years.
Reason #8: It was Pruned Incorrectly
This is especially common with stonefruits like plums, pluots and apricots, but also with apples and pears. Fruiting trees require different pruning strategies than ornamental trees. Apples and apricots, for instance, bear fruit on the same spurs year-after-year. Pruning all the little dead looking stubs off the tree in winter is a sure way to guarantee no fruit the following year. Peaches, lemons, pomegranates, avocados, oranges, figs, persimmons, etc. – they’re all pruned differently.
Ron Vanderhoff is the Nursery Manager at Roger’s Gardens, Corona del Mar and his profile can be seen at www.theMulch.com/my-profile/userprofile/Ron Vanderhoff.
Questions from Readers July 3, 2010
I need some suggestions for plant in rather deep shade. I’ve tried camellias, impatiens, azaleas and a few others, but they haven’t done very well.
Lauren,
If you have deep shade you will need to be very selective. A few plants to consider are fatsia, aucuba, mahonia, osmanthus, clivia, ligularia, pachysandra and several ferns, such as giant chain fern, sword fern and holly fern. A woodland effect with some of these blended to contrast their foliage patterns and growth habits can be quite soothing and beautiful. If the area is warm enough in the winter you can add some indoor plants for a splash of color, such as spathiphyllum (peace lily), variegated pothos and various brightly colored crotons.

What's Happening
-
Happy New Year family and friends!!! I love you all and wish you peace, love and happiness. Make 2012 awesome!
-
Flower Mama added Epidendrum × obrienianum to My Wish list
-
Flower Mama added Epidendrum cochleatum to My Plants
-
Flower Mama added Epidendrum × obrienianum to My Plants
-
Flower Mama added Epidendrum cochleatum to My Wish list
-
avocadoexperimenter created a new topic Seeking dwarf avocado pits or rootstock... in the forums.Anyone have viable pits or rootstock from dwarf avocado trees? Trees can be either grafted or ungrafted, and I'll gladly pay for them..
Thanks
AE -
LG: I planted Anna and Golden Dorsett apple trees ast year. This week the Anna shows 15 or more clusters of flowers but the Dorsett is still dormant. Aren't they supposed to bloom at the same time? Am I going to harvest apples later of the two are not synchronized as I don't see any nearby neighbors having apples trees?
Get Free Plant Care
Special Offers
Featured Listings
Walter Andersen Nursery - Pt. Loma![]() walterandersen.com Telephone: (619) 224-8271 Hits: 4229 |








