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Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Pruning and Painting Peach After Limb Breakage

Q. I pruned some fruit-laden heavy branches from my semi-dwarf nectarine tree during the hot summer months last year. I think I've damaged the tree. The leaves on a few branches turned yellow/orange while 80% of the other leaves look dead. Should I do some heavy pruning, or wait and see?

Limb breakage of peach due to heavy fruit load. Thin and prune. This opening can lead to sunburn on the branches and subsequent borer damage to the limbs.

A. Leave the tree unpruned this season to protect itself as much as possible. Let it send up lots of new growth this spring and hope for the best. Right now, the tree needs to shade its larger limbs and trunk to help prevent sunburn and prevent borers from attacking the tree. Scientists report that borers love to attack peach and nectarine trees where intense sunlight has damaged it. Borers are not controlled by winter sprays of horticultural oil.

Peach tree painted with white latex paint right after planting.

Paint the upper surface of exposed large limbs and the south and west sides of the trunk with diluted white latex paint. Painting or covering these areas helps reduce sunburn. Sunburn results from intense sunlight shining on exposed areas. Painting exposed surfaces of the tree with any light-colored latex paint mixed half-and-half with water helps reduce this damage. It won’t eliminate its possibility, but helps to reduce it.


Ready made white tree paint. It can be made by diluting white latex paint with water, 50/50.

As a precaution, drench the soil around the tree with a systemic insecticide for borer control. Do this immediately after the tree finishes flowering this spring. Don’t eat the fruit, produced this season, from this tree because the insecticide is systemic and likely inside the fruit. Most of it will be gone from the tree by the next growing season. Follow the label directions exactly.

Next season remove major limbs only during the winter months and always remove fruit from your tree when it’s tiny so as to reduce limb breakage.

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