✂️🌿 How to Prune Plants in Polytunnels

Pruning inside a polytunnel needs a different approach to outdoor growing. Warmth, shelter, and high humidity mean plants grow faster — and so do disease and overcrowding if pruning is neglected.

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This guide explains how to prune plants in polytunnels correctly, helping you control growth, improve airflow, and maximise yields without causing stress.

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🌱 Why Pruning Is Crucial in Polytunnels

Polytunnels create ideal growing conditions — sometimes too ideal.

Correct pruning helps to:

  • Prevent excessive, soft growth
  • Improve airflow and reduce humidity
  • Reduce fungal diseases
  • Direct energy into flowers and fruit
  • Keep plants manageable in tight spaces

Unpruned polytunnel plants quickly become crowded and disease-prone.


🌡️ Timing: When to Prune in a Polytunnel

Growth happens earlier and faster under cover.

Best pruning times:

  • Early morning (plants are hydrated and cool)
  • Dry days with good ventilation
  • Regular light pruning throughout the season

Avoid pruning:

  • Late evening (humidity rises overnight)
  • During extreme heat
  • When plants are visibly stressed

Ventilation matters just as much as timing.


✂️ How Much Can You Prune Safely Under Cover?

Plants recover faster — but limits still apply.

  • Never remove more than 20% at once
  • For routine pruning, aim for 10–15%
  • Prune little and often rather than heavily

Over-pruning under cover leads to rapid stress and disease entry.


🌿 Focus on Airflow First

Airflow is the number one priority in polytunnels.

Prune to:

  • Open the centre of plants
  • Remove inward-growing shoots
  • Reduce leaf overlap
  • Create visible gaps for air movement

You should be able to see through plants, not just around them.


🍅 Pruning Common Polytunnel Crops

Tomatoes

  • Remove side shoots on cordon varieties
  • Remove lower leaves once fruit sets
  • Limit leaf density around trusses

Cucumbers

  • Control side shoots
  • Remove overcrowded growth
  • Improve airflow around fruit

Peppers & Chillies

  • Remove weak inner shoots
  • Thin crowded growth
  • Avoid heavy pruning during flowering

Aubergines

  • Remove excess shoots
  • Focus energy into fruit-bearing stems

🌸 Flowers and Companion Plants

Even flowers need pruning under cover.

  • Deadhead regularly
  • Thin dense foliage
  • Remove leggy growth

This prevents them blocking airflow to crops.


🧼 Hygiene Is Essential in Polytunnels

Diseases spread extremely fast under cover.

Always:

  • Clean tools between plants
  • Remove diseased growth immediately
  • Bag infected material
  • Ventilate well after pruning

Never leave cut material lying in the tunnel.


🚫 Common Polytunnel Pruning Mistakes

  • ❌ Letting growth become too dense
  • ❌ Pruning late in the day
  • ❌ Ignoring ventilation
  • ❌ Heavy pruning in hot weather
  • ❌ Cutting stressed plants

Small mistakes escalate quickly under cover.


🌡️ Aftercare After Pruning

After pruning:

  • Ventilate immediately
  • Water carefully (avoid wetting leaves)
  • Shade if temperatures rise
  • Monitor for signs of stress or disease

Healthy recovery depends on stable conditions.


🧠 Key Takeaway

To prune plants in polytunnels successfully, prune lightly and regularly, prioritise airflow, manage humidity, and maintain excellent hygiene. Under-cover growing rewards attention — and punishes neglect.

In polytunnels, pruning and ventilation work hand in hand.


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