Culture
Best grown in well-drained humusy loams with medium moisture in full sun. More tolerant of heavy clays that many other types of fruit tree. Plant two or more varieties for best cross-pollination. Early spring flowers may be damaged by frosts. Planting early, midseason and late varieties extends the harvest period over several months. Trees may not bear fruit until 4-5 years after planting. For fruit production purposes, dwarf varieties take up less space, and are much easier to maintain in regard to controlling insects and diseases, training, pruning and harvesting fruit. Trees with dwarf rootstocks should be planted 15’ apart. In the St. Louis area, only plant cultivars with good resistance to fireblight. Pears generally perform best in cool, dry climates where fireblight is less of a problem.
'Doyenné du Comice' needs another variety for cross-pollination. Site in a location where periodic chemical spraying will not pose problems to adjacent areas.
Noteworthy Characteristics
Pyrus communis, commonly called European pear or common pear, is a parent of a large number of pear cultivars grown for fruit production. It has been widely planted in North America, and has escaped cultivation and naturalized throughout much of the eastern U.S. in abandoned fields, along fencerows and in open woodland areas. Most of the pears sold in supermarkets today come from varieties of this species, including such old favorites as ‘Comice’, ‘Bartlett’ and ‘Anjou’. Cultivated pears are grafted onto rootstocks which influence the size of the tree, resistance to pests and diseases, time to fruiting maturity, and overall longevity. Standard trees typically grow to 25-30’ (less frequently to 60’) tall with upright branching and pyramidal form. Trees grafted to dwarfing rootstocks generally grow to 8-10’ tall. Ovate to elliptic glossy dark green leaves (to 4” long) have crenate to serrate margins. Foliage turns shades of red and yellow in fall. Aromatic, 5-petaled, creamy white (occasionally flushed with pale pink) flowers in corymbs appear in early spring on spur-like branchlets. Flowers give way to edible, pear-shaped fruits that ripen from mid summer to fall depending on cultivar. P. communis is sometimes used as a collective name for all pear cultivars grown for their fruit.
Genus name is the Latin name for pear.
Specific epithet means common.
Pears, like apples, are pome fruits. 'Doyenné du Comice' is available as grafted to standard rootstocks (15-20' tall) or as grafted to dwarfing rootstocks which produce smaller trees. The tree which grew at the Kemper Center was grafted to a dwarf rootstock which limits growth to 8-10' tall. Dwarf trees bear standard-size fruit but have the advantages of fitting into smaller spaces and of being more manageable (e.g., easier to spray, prune and harvest). Creamy white flowers in dense corymbs appear in profusion in early spring. Flowers give way to very large, greenish-yellow pears often with a red blush which ripen in early October (USDA Zone 5).
Problems
Pears are usually very susceptible to fireblight, particularly in years with warm and wet spring weather. Additional disease problems include anthracnose, canker, scab and powdery mildew. Insect visitors include pear psylla, coddling moth and borers.
'Doyenné du Comice' is moderately resistant to fireblight. Cold temperature injury to flower buds and flowers from early spring frosts is not uncommon.
Uses
Grown primarily for the fruit crop, but early spring bloom has good ornamental value. This dwarf pear is ideal for landscapes with space limitations.