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April is peak planting season — time to get crops in the ground and your garden thriving.

Vegetable Plants & Seedlings
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🍏 Creating a Winter Orchard Checklist (UK Guide)


🌸 Introduction: Winter Is the Orchard’s Most Important Season

A productive orchard starts with proper winter care. While fruit trees are dormant, this is the best time to inspect, prune (where appropriate), protect, feed the soil and prepare your orchard for a bigger, healthier harvest next year.

A winter orchard checklist helps you:

  • prevent winter damage
  • reduce pests and disease
  • shape trees for better airflow
  • improve soil health
  • protect young trees from frost
  • set the foundation for strong spring growth

Below are the best products to support your winter orchard tasks.


Check Out Our Recommended Products

• Tree Fleece Jackets & Wraps

Essential for protecting young or frost-sensitive trees.
Click here to see them

• Mulch (Compost, Bark, Woodchip)

Perfect for insulating roots and boosting soil health.
Click here to see them

• Bypass Secateurs & Loppers

Ideal for safe winter pruning of apple and pear trees.
Click here to see them


❄️ Winter Orchard Checklist (Full Guide)

Below is your complete orchard maintenance plan for the winter months.


🍂 1. Remove Fallen Leaves, Fruit & Debris

Start with a clean orchard floor.

Remove:

  • fallen leaves
  • mummified fruits
  • broken branches
  • rotting fruit under trees

This helps prevent:

❌ apple scab
❌ brown rot
❌ codling moth overwintering
❌ fungal infections

Keep the area tidy all winter.


✂️ 2. Prune Apple & Pear Trees (BUT NOT Stone Fruit)

Winter is the correct pruning time for:

  • apple trees
  • pear trees

Prune to:

  • remove dead/diseased wood
  • open the centre of the tree
  • reduce overcrowding
  • encourage better fruiting spurs

👉 Do NOT prune plums, cherries, peaches, apricots or nectarines in winter.
They must be pruned in summer to avoid silver leaf disease.


🍑 3. Inspect Stone Fruit Trees (No Pruning)

Stone fruit (plums, cherries, apricots, peaches, nectarines) need gentle winter handling.

Winter tasks:

  • check branches for damage
  • remove fallen fruit
  • protect from frost
  • inspect trunk for gummosis
  • ensure good drainage

Do not cut branches in winter.


❄️ 4. Protect Young Trees from Frost

Young trees are highly vulnerable to:

  • frost cracking
  • frozen roots
  • wind damage

Use:

  • fleece jackets
  • tree wraps
  • windbreak mesh

Remove covers on mild days to prevent dampness.


🍂 5. Mulch Around the Base of Trees

Mulch is essential winter protection.

Use:

  • compost
  • bark
  • leaf mould
  • well-rotted manure

Apply 5–10 cm around the tree — but never touching the trunk.

Benefits:

  • insulates roots
  • prevents soil freeze
  • improves soil health
  • reduces weeds

🌧 6. Check Drainage Around Trees

Waterlogged soil kills trees faster than frost.

Inspect:

  • low spots
  • compacted soil
  • pooling water near trunks

Fix drainage with:

  • raised planting
  • compost
  • grit
  • aeration

Trees must not sit in winter wet.


🪵 7. Check Stakes, Ties & Supports

Winter winds can loosen or snap young trees.

Checklist:

  • tighten stakes
  • replace broken ties
  • ensure ties are soft and non-restrictive
  • avoid rubbing on bark

Good support prevents wind rock and root damage.


🌿 8. Remove Suckers & Unwanted Growth

Winter is the best time to remove:

  • root suckers
  • water shoots
  • branches crossing or rubbing

This keeps trees healthy and structurally sound.


🐦 9. Protect Trees from Wildlife

Winter brings hungry animals.

Use:

  • rabbit guards
  • deer netting
  • protective mesh
  • spiral tree guards

These prevent bark damage and nibbling of young growth.


🧼 10. Clean Pruning Tools to Prevent Disease

Before and after pruning:

  • clean blades
  • disinfect secateurs
  • oil moving parts

Prevents disease spread between trees.


🌱 What to Expect in Spring After Winter Orchard Care

By March–May:

  • apple and pear blossom will be stronger
  • stone fruit will bud reliably
  • root systems will be healthier
  • trees will produce more growth
  • branches will be structurally stronger
  • fruit yields will increase

Winter work = bigger summer harvests.


🌸 FAQs

Do all fruit trees need winter pruning?

Only apples and pears — never prune stone fruit in winter.

How much mulch should I use?

5–10 cm around, but not touching, the trunk.

Does frost damage fruit trees?

Yes, especially young or potted trees — fleece helps.

Should I feed fruit trees in winter?

No — begin feeding in early spring.


🌼 Conclusion

A winter orchard checklist keeps your fruit trees safe, healthy and ready for spring. With pruning, mulching, frost protection, drainage care and wildlife barriers, your orchard will thrive through winter and burst into life in the new growing season.


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Growing your own veg is one of the most rewarding things you can do on an allotment or in the garden — saving money, eating better, and enjoying the process from seed to harvest.

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