When we first moved to our new (to us) home in late 2020, we were delighted to discover the property came with fruit trees, notably apples. Some of the trees were young, but we have four mature trees, evidently the remnants of an old orchard. You can see two of them below.
These stately trees were wildly overgrown. As a result, they produced scads of little bitty apples, most of which were way too high for us to reach. The wildlife like them, though.
Then last year, our older neighbor hired some arborists to work on her (young and healthy) fruit trees, something she does on a regular basis (which is no doubt why they're so healthy). Before the arborists left for the day, Don asked them to come look over our overgrown apples and give us an estimate as to what it would cost to bring them back into shape.
After viewing the neglected trees, they said it would be a multi-year project (no surprise), and quoted us a reasonable price for the amount of work involved.
Last week they came out and got to work. This is what they started with: a chaos of overgrown, tangled branches.
This is the upper tree. You can see why it only produced itty bitty apples.
The middle tree is to the left, and the lower tree is to the right. Kinda hard to distinguish everything with winter's leafless landscape, but these are the three main trees the arborists hoped to tackle.
They got right to work setting up ladders and donning safety equipment. You can gauge the size of the trees with the arborists standing below them.
Much of their efforts were directed at pruning away deadwood and exposing the strongest branches. They warned us the trees would "sucker like crazy" in the spring. Next year's treatment would involve removing "three out of four" of the new suckers, selecting which ones would bear the best fruit.
The arborists focused on the two upper trees first. A pile of branches started accumulating.
Soon a shape emerged from beneath all the shagginess. It was starting to look like a tree again, rather than an overgrown bush.
While the head arborist focused his attention on the first tree, the other two worked on hacking back the second tree.
This is definitely a line of work requiring a good head for heights.
Though the day was freezing cold, they were soon shedding coats.
Look at the size of these trees dwarfing the two people in their branches!
At one point, we asked the head arborist, in his professional estimation, how old the trees might be. Based on location and rainfall, he guesstimated around 75 years.
Three-quarters of a century. We were glad to be able to start bringing these beautiful mature trees back into productivity.
By the end of the day, two of the trees were as "done" as they could be for the first go-round, and the arborists got a start on the third tree as well (it was getting dark or they'd have done more). Look at this pile of branches they removed!
They had brought a chipper with them, but (a) it would have been impossible to get it down the steep slope where the trees were located; and (b) we preferred they focus on doing as much work as possible on the trees themselves rather than spend time chipping the branches. Don and I will burn the branches later on.
The two upper apples looked like new trees by the time the day was done.
This is the upper tree, before and after (different angles).
This is the middle tree, before (on the left) and after:
Now I can't wait until summer to see how these trees look in all their renewed glory!