Pear whip grows 9 feet so far this season

Very nice tree you have there!

I have a Hunter's Choice that I planted last spring. I did some pruning on it to encourage a little better central leader and it recovered and grew massive amounts like yours did. I also planted an Oriental pear at the same time and it has grown much slower. None of it really matters until they produce (or don't produce) but it sure is exciting to have so much growth.
 
Amazing!

Question: Will you prune to a central leader this winter?
 
I can tell you that my first attempt to prune to a central leader didn't work well. The branches grew so fast that it ended up looking like Native's again. I also tied the lateral limbs down for a better crotch angle. They grew out about 6 inches and then turned straight up again. I'm probably going to attempt a little more this winter but from the looks of it, the tree is going to end up doing whatever the hell it wants.
 
Amazing!

Question: Will you prune to a central leader this winter?

If this was an apple tree - yes for sure. With pears, I never know quite what to do. Even when I have pruned pears to a central leader, it seems that the limbs lower than 15 feet or so still want to grow very long like the central leader. If you try to train them to grow outward, they will just keep growing and the weight of the fruit can break them.

It almost seems to me that with pears the tight vertical growth doesn't hurt anything and helps to keep the limbs from breaking from the weight of the fruit. The tall Ayers pears that I have shown pictures of recently were just let go to grow like they want to except for removing limbs about 5 feet up. It has worked exceptional for them. However, with my Moonglow I had limbs to break this year. I actually pruned the Moonglow a few days ago because even the central leader was about to break. My hope is that the tree will now get "bushier" and grow shorter, stronger limbs.

The Galloway and Senator Clark pears at the farm seem to have a better tree structure than Moonglow, and the limbs seem to grow more like what I would want them to.

I look at old pear trees in the neighborhood that were never trained and all of them in time have done well. It seems that so far for me that the variety of the pear makes a difference with Moonglow being the big question mark at this point. I'm probably going to just let the one in the pic do whatever it wants to and see what happens.

I'm certainly open to suggestions and would like to hear other's thoughts.

PS: The Gate Pear and Mrs. Lanene I planted and haven't got fruit from yet are shaping themselves well. They look like they will be in good shape when the fruit comes.
 
I like your pear choices Hunter, I put in a Gate,Galloway, Moonglow and Senator Clark two years ago. When I started messing with pears about 7 years ago I tried training to a central leader and for good crotch angles and it was pretty much futile. I now just let em grow how they want. On all my new trees I started letting the limbs start only a few feet above the ground because my deer love to browse them and it puts pears within their reach earlier.
 
9 feet in a year is really impressive nice work NH. :)
 
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