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Pruning an Avocado PlantQuestion:I have grown an avocado seed and it is 2 years old and approximately 9 feet tall. I have had it outside and need to bring it in for the winter, but it is too tall for the ceiling. Can I cut it back or should I just leave it alone?Thanks,
Answer:Michelle,This is a tough one, as I would hate to see anything slow down a 9 ft. tall avocado tree. I'm not sure how a 9 ft. tall avocado will respond to being pruned. Is it tall and spindly or have you pruned it back before to encourage branching from below? I'm going to assume since it has grown so tall in just two years time that you may have never pruned it before. If you have a fair number of strong, leafy side branches I wouldn't worry about cutting it back far enough to fit it indoors. If the plant consists primarily of one stem, you might want to let the top bend at the ceiling and cut a few of the side branches back to try to encourage more branching. If new branches start to emerge, you can safely cut back the top. You don't say what zone you're in, but if you live in 9b or above you probably won't have to keep it indoors long enough to worry about causing a permanent change in its appearance. As long as there are enough leaves left on the plant to maintain food production and the plant is in good overall health, I wouldn't worry too much about cutting it back. Clearly you have a knack for growing avocado plants. If something should happen to this one as a result of you cutting it back, you might consider keeping any future plants to ceiling height with regular pruning. Ellen About The Author:
Feedback About This Post:RE: Pruning an Avocado Plant
To all and to anyone. Go ahead and prune your avocado trees as much as you wish. the plants that you have propagated from seed will never bear fruit. if for some reason they do bear fruit, the fruit is highly unlikely to resemble the quality of the original fruit. Post by elmeromero RE: Pruning an Avocado Plant
My avocado plant is about 9 months old. I keep it by a window, not in direct sunlight, and water it every few days. The bottom few leaves are starting to get brown around the edges. What does this mean? Am I watering it too much, not enough? Post By Jennifer (Guest Post) RE: Avocados plantIn order for my avocado plant to bear fruit, does it have to be cross pollinated with another plant? Also, it is very young (only 6 leaves at the top)and no leaves on the bottom, should I pinch off the top leaves to make it bush out below? Post By deb and Art (Guest Post) RE: Pruning an Avocado Plant
I seem to note a thread here, most "seem" to be discussing Avocado Trees grown indoors? Mine is outdoors and will be for it's lifetime, an outdoor tree. Does that affect the need/requirement of pruning? Post by Christopher Joe RE: Pruning an Avocado PlantMy 9 ft avocado plant is cut all the way to the bottom. I left it in the garage for the winter because of being so large and tall, and thought that at night if I closed the garage door and put it by a window it would make it throughout the winter...WRONG. It looked so sad . So brought it in and there was not one leaf to be found..Of course because of the temp change...Maybe wishful thinking on in the spring it will form some new sprouts at the bottom and take off again...Say a prayer... Post By Michelle (Guest Post) RE: Pruning an Avocado Plant
I trimmed mine and it bushed out a little bit and it looked so much better. When spring came it put on extra branches and leaves. It was wonderful looking. Post by trbrown22 RE: Pruning an Avocado Plant
It's my understanding that the Avocado is semi-tropical, so I'd not take chances by leaving it out in colder than 50 degrees! 60 or above would be better, and I'd put it in the garage, pot double wrapped in a blanket,stem/trunk wrapped in pipe insulation (inexpensive from hardware store) on a stepping stone base, under a 24 hr. light of 100 W. I've found grow bulbs in regular bulb shape, but they're not so cheap. Post By Lynda (Guest Post) |
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