I would dearly love to grow my own peaches and Asian pears, and I do have room for trees. What I don’t have is the desire to manage those 15- to 30-foot tall and wide wonders. So, this year, I’m going to try espaliering. It’s a horticultural technique used to train woody trees or shrubs to grow on a flat plane by pruning and tying select branches against a wall or fence. You’ve no doubt seen examples of it as a decorative device in formal gardens, and in the less formal, horizontal branching used in vineyards. Although many believe the ancient Romans originated the technique, paintings of espaliered fig trees have been found in Egyptian tombs from about 1,400 BCE. By the Middle Ages in Europ
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