The pear is far from being the most successful tree on a garden plot, which can be planted wherever you like and the landscape designer advises.
This way you can make mistakes that will be difficult to correct later, resulting in a complete lack of harvest.
We will tell you where you should not plant pears or what you should not plant next to an already growing tree.
Of all the fruits, this is a real aggressor, which will lead to a nutrient deficiency, which will soon cause the delicate pear to dry out.
It is better not to plant cherries and their relatives sweet cherries closer than 10 meters. Such different trees have a lot in common - diseases, pests, need for nutrients.
The pear will not forgive or tolerate proximity to jasmine, viburnum and lilac bushes.
Acacia, which grows at an incredible rate, and beech should not grow together with pear trees – the yield drops by almost half.
These are the main enemies of the pear. Fir, juniper and other decorative representatives of evergreens will worsen the composition of the soil, but what is even worse - they threaten to reward the tree with rust. The tree will have to be treated constantly, and it is unknown who will give in first - the tree or the gardener.