Growing your own fruit means that you can enjoy the pick of delicious varieties fresh from the tree or bush, turn them into pies, jellies and jams or store or freeze them for the winter.

Advertisement

And you don't need a lot of space, either - in small gardens, you can grow fruit as cordons or trained trees. You can also grow fruit in containers.

With a little care throughout the year, you can enjoy the best possible harvests - here's how.

1

Buy bare-root plants

You'll get a better choice of varieties if you buy bare-root trees, bushes and canes and they are generally cheaper than container-grown plants, too. They're available in the dormant season, from November to March, usually by mail order.

Planting a bare-root fruit tree
2

Plant at least two fruit trees

Plant at least two fruit trees so that they can cross pollinate. Where space is limited, choose self-pollinating varieties that fruit on their own, or try family trees with several varieties grafted onto a single trunk.

More like this
Planting two fruit trees next to each other
3

Prune correctly

Prune bush fruit such as blackcurrants and gooseberries into an open, goblet shape in winter. This lets light and air into the centre of the plant so that fungal diseases can't take hold. Stone fruit trees, such as plums, should be pruned in summer; apples and pears in winter.

Pruning blackcurrants in winter
4

Protect blossom

Protect blossom from frost if possible, by covering with fleece. Remove the covers by midday so that pollinating insects can get in, then recover at night.

Protecting blossom from frost with fleece
5

Mulch

Mulch around the base of plants with well-rotted organic matter in autumn, to lock in nutrients and water into the soil and suppress weeds. Use pine needles around blueberries as they create the acidic conditions they love. Scatter slow-release fertiliser, such as chicken manure, each spring onto moist soil.

Mulching around fruit canes
6

Net fruit

Net fruit against birds as it starts to colour, using bamboo canes to hold it off the leaves. Peg down firmly and check daily to make sure birds don't become entangled.

Making a netting cage with bamboo canes to protect ripening fruit from birds
7

Water regularly

Water new fruit plants regularly until they are established, and continue to water any plants in pots. Water all fruit plants when they have ripening fruit, but be careful not to over-water as this can lead to tasteless fruit and can leach nutrients from the soil.

Watering fruit canes
8

Pick off fruits

Pick off baby fruits from newly planted fruit trees in their first season. It takes willpower, but it allows the tree to concentrate on establishing well. Mature trees will drop fruits early in the season (called the 'June drop') but it's a good idea to thin fruits growing too close together so that those remaining have room to mature.

Thinning out forming apples
9

Underplant with flowers

Underplant fruit with nectar-rich flowers such as nepeta, lavender or annual flower mixes to attract bees and other pollinating insects - they'll pollinate your blossom at the same time.

Advertisement
A bee on lavender
10

Let fruit ripen fully

Let fruits ripen fully on the plant or tree, so that they have more time to build up nutrients. But pick them before they become overripe as they may rot and spread disease - and will attract wasps too.

Ripe cherries on a tree
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement