How to Prune a Mulberry Tree for Multiple Crops in a Single Season

pruning mulberry tree

Mulberry trees are deciduous trees which are traditionally winter pruned when they’re dormant and have no leaves, with the pruning carried out in late winter.

When spring arrives, the buds on the bare branches open to produce new leaves, as well as new branches which carry the mulberry fruit.

Yes, I did say fruit. Botanically, mulberries are not berries, they are multiple fruit,  which contain the fruit of many flowers merged closely together.

After the fruit are harvested, no additional crops are produce, so mulberries normally produce a single crop in a year.

How to Extend the Cropping Season in Mulberries

tray of black mulberries picked from tree
A punnet full of freshly picked giant black mulberries

Most fruit trees fruit on year old growth or older, which means that we must wait a year or more for new branches to mature before they can bear fruit.

Mulberries, on the other hand, fruit on new growth. Whenever new growth occurs, fruit will be produced. But new growth doesn’t have to happen once a year.

Whenever a tree is pruned, it will produce new growth, and if the pruning is done in the growing season (spring and summer), then even more new growth ill be produced.

After a mulberry has produced its first crop, the tree can be pruned, which will cause new growth to be produced, and more growth will produce more fruit! If doesn’t matter how far back the cut is made along the branch, because mulberries will produce new growth even if cut back fairly hard.

Ideally, cut new growth back by half to increase branching, for more information, see the article – How to Prune a Fruit Tree, Step By Step.

What if the branch still has unripe fruit, do we need to wait?

No, if there are fruit lower down on the branch, let it ripen, but if there is long vegetative (leafy, non-fruiting) growth at the end of the branches, then that can be cut off as shown in the picture at the very top of this article, leaving the mulberries lower down to ripen.

Using this method I successfully harvested four crops of mulberries in a year, so it really works!

Summer Pruning to Control Mulberry Tree Size

By knowing how trees grow, in the case of mulberries we can adjust our pruning timing to maximise our harvests by producing multiple crops in a year rather than a single crop, and the summer pruning (actually carried out late spring to late summer) also helps keep the size of vigorous growing mulberry trees down, so we can more easily harvest our trees, and net them if necessary.

When fruit is produce very high up on unmanaged trees, it’s usually eaten by birds, possums and other critters. Large unpruned trees also take up way too  much space, especially in urban gardens.

A better strategy for managing mulberry trees is to keep them small and productive, rather than large and unharvestable, especially in urban gardens, and this can be achieved with summer pruning.

9 thoughts on “How to Prune a Mulberry Tree for Multiple Crops in a Single Season

  1. Wow! It is interesting to note, that one can get multiple crop of mulberries in a year!
    How long does it take for an evergreen dwarf mulberry in a 15 gallon container grown via tissue culture to fruit?
    Knowing which year wood a tree produces fruit on is so critical for pruning! Thanks for a well written article.

    1. No need to propagate a mulberry using tissue culture, they grow very easily from cuttings when dormant, as they’re deciduous trees, I assume you mean an everbearing dwarf mulberry rather than an dwarf evergreen mulberry.

  2. Thank you Angelo! Does this apply to all the mulberries – including white shatoot (Morus macroura)?

  3. Hi Angelo, thank you for all the good information on your website. I have a question re pruning: is end of March too late for summer pruning? I didn’t get prune my tree last winter, and my earlier summer pruning plans fell by the wayside as well… Thank you, Maja

    1. Hi Maja, I usually do a late summer prune in March (first month of Autumn in the southern hemisphere) if I need to, especially when there is a lag in the seasons and early autumn still feels like spring, as the trees will continue growing.

  4. Hi Angelo, I have been following you for years, thank-you so much for the information you provide.
    The Mulberry tree we have is about 25 years old and has, for many years provided us with beautiful fruit, however, over the last 5 years, the fruit has been dry shrivelled and small, but still turns black. At present, it is fruiting prolifically (Spring). Late Winter, early Spring, I reapply compost, manure and a small handful of blood and bone and mulch with goat straw.
    Your assessment would be appreciated, thanks, Kay

  5. Hello. I leave in the Caribbean. I just got a producing mulberry tree and I was told it will produce 10 out of 12 months. When should
    I prune it since it is barely ever dormant? Our “winter” is in January when temperatures drop to 26 degC 🙂

    Cheers. Stephane

    1. Hi Stephane, just prune the mulberry tree after you harvest all the fruit, it will regrow where it has been pruned, and the new growth will bear more fruit. Let the tree rest over those two months, and remember to feed it often to keep it growing and fruiting!

Leave a Reply