PRUNING, the removal of branches from fruit or forest trees, in order to the greater production of fruit, the improvement of the timber, or purposes of ornament. In prun ing for ornamental purposes, taste must chiefly be consulted, but reference must be made to what has been too little regarded in pruning of every kind—the nature or habit of the tree itself. Some trees will bear clipping into fantastic forms, which would be utterly destructive of others. Such forms, once esteemed as the finest ornaments of a pleasure-ground, or the neighborhood of a mansion, are rejected by the simpler taste of the present age, and the topiarian art has few admirers. Much may be done, however, by the removal of branches, to give a finer form to ornamental trees; but in this, as in the pruning of trees grown for the sake of their timber, a great mistake is very generally committed in permitting branches to grow to a considerable size before they are cut off. It may be accepted as a general rule, that the branches removed should be small in pro portion to the whole bulk of the tree. The removal of twigs and small branches is attended by no bad effects, and may be beneficial; but the removal of large branches is dangerous. The leaving of stumps or snags is an aggravation of the evil. They rot away, and spoil the timber of the stein; indeed, a hole is not 'infrequently formed. But as to forest trees, pruning may with great advantage be in great part avoided, by taking care to plant at proper distances, and thinning out the plantations sufficiently „in early periods of their growth. In this way, better timber is obtained, and a greater produce from the land. Pines and firs scarcely ever require pruning, and are probably in almost all cases the worse of that which they get, except in the removal of those lower branches which have actually begun to decay. In other trees, it is sometimes of importance to watch for branches that would divide the trunk, and to prevent the division, causing the main stem to ascend higher before it forms a crown; but to be of any use, this must be done while the branches are sill very young. Plantations should, therefore, be
examined with a view to pruning, at intervals of not more than two years, after they are six or eight years old.
In orchards and fruit-gardens, pruning is necessary, the object being not to produce timber, or the utmost luxuriance of trees, but fruit in the greatest perfection and abun dance. The habits of each kind must be studied. Even in the pruning of gooseberry and currant bushes, regard must be had to natural diversities, the gooseberry and black currant producing fruit chiefly on young wood, while the red and white-currant produce fruit chiefly on spurs from older branches. And so it is among trees; apricots, for example, producing fruit chiefly on young wood; cherries mostly on spurs, while plums produce both in the one way and in the other. The object of the gardener in pruning is to bring the tree into the condition best suited for producing fine fruit and in the greatest abundance; and to this the training of wall trees (q.v.) must also be accom modated. Sometimes, in order to produce particularly fine fruits for the improvement of the variety by seed, or for the sake of a prize at a horticultural exhibition, the gardener diminishes the number of branches likely to bear fruit, beyond what would otherwise be desirable.
The general seasons of pruning are winter and spring; but some trees, particularly cherries, are advantageously pruned in summer, as they then throw out less gum.
Pruning instruments are of various kinds—knives, axes, saws, bills of very various forms, etc., and the areruncator, which may be described as a pair of scissors, one blade hooked or crooked, attached to a long handle, and working by a cord and pulley. It is scarcely used except for standard trees in gardens and orchards.