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Dessert apples, cooking apples, dwarf apple trees for smaller gardens - you'll find them all here in our fantastic range. Or try growing pear trees either in your garden or in a large container on your patio. You'll be rewarded with bumper crops of juicy sweet fruits. Our 'How to grow fruit trees' will help you select the best variety for your garden.
Apple 'Cox's Orange Pippin'Malus domestica Regarded to be the finest tasting dessert apple, the rich aromatic flavour and crisp, juicy texture set this apple apart from other varieties. Apple ‘Cox’s Orange Pippin’ produces medium sized, orange-red fruits with thin skins. Although not considered to be the easiest variety to grow, it is well suited to the temperate UK climate, producing a good crop that can be harvested from September for immediate use and store for a short period too. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Cox’s Orange Pippin’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. ‘Cox’s Orange Pippin’ is not self-fertile so for the heaviest crops it is best grown with another variety such as ‘Braeburn’. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as suitable pollinator.Root wrap plant supplied. Height and spread: 2.5m (8’) Rootstock: M9. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. |
Apple 'Family Apple Tree'Malus domestica, Patio fruit tree Customer RatingAn entire orchard on just one tree! Family fruit trees have three different varieties grafted onto one stem, which will pollinate each other and crop at different times to extend the picking season. Perfect for the smaller garden with room for only one tree; and even suited to growing in a large patio container (holding at least 30 litres of compost). Harvest from September. Apple rootstock: M106. Height and spread if not containerised: 4m (13’). Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |
Apple (Britain's Favourites Collection)Malus domestica Britain has one of the best climates in the world for growing apples of the highest quality. This collection contains some of the most highly regarded varieties. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. The varieties in this collection are not self-fertile but will act as suitable pollinators for one another. Root wrap plants supplied. Height and spread: 2.5m (8’) Rootstock: M9. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Collection comprises 1 tree each of: Apple ‘Braeburn’ - This well known dessert variety earns its popularity by being easy to grow, early to crop from a young age, and having excellent storage potential. Apple ‘Bramley’s Seedling’ - The most famous cooking apple of all, producing large fruits with a sharp acidic flavour that are ideal for making delicious pies and crumbles. Apple ‘Cox's Orange Pippin’ - Regarded to be the finest tasting dessert apple, the rich aromatic flavour and crisp, juicy texture set this apple apart from other varieties. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |
Apple 'Isaac Newton'Malus domestica, Apple 'Flower of Kent' Plant a direct descendant of one of the most historically important trees in Britain, a celebrated national treasure for over 300 years - Sir Isaac Newton's Apple tree! The original tree associated with Sir Isaac Newton’s observations on gravity stood in the garden of his home, Woolsthorpe Manor; near Grantham. The tree is said to have fallen in a storm and has subsequently regrown on the site, and is still there to this day. It is from this tree that this Isaac Newton’s Apple Tree has been propagated, offering a rare opportunity to grow a piece of history in your own garden. Each tree comes with certification that the tree has been DNA verified as a direct descendant of the original tree in Woolthorpe Manor Gardens. The variety is known as the ‘Flower of Kent’, and produces hefty cooking apples with an old-fashioned, bumpy shape. The green skin flushes red where the sun shines on it and the fruit cooks to a soft puree with a refined, sweet flavour. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Isaac Newton’s’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. Apple ‘Flower of Kent’ is not self fertile so it is best grown with another variety to ensure good pollination. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as suitable pollinator. Height and spread: Up to 3m (10’). Rootstock: M26. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |
Apple 'James Grieve'Malus domestica
A superb RHS AGM variety that makes a fantastic cooking apple and a delicious dessert apple too! Harvest the fruits in early September for refreshingly sharp apples that hold their shape well during cooking. A few weeks later the fruits mature, taking on a sweet flavour and soft texture that makes the perfect dessert fruit. This versatile variety is also renowned for its juicy flesh which is ideal for juicing. Grafted onto a semi dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘James Grieve’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. Apple ‘James Grieve’ is partially self fertile but it is best grown with another variety to ensure good pollination. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as suitable pollinator. Height and spread: 3m (10’) Rootstock: M26. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |
Apple 'Pinova'Malus domestica Dessert apple ‘Pinova’ boasts a lovely flavour which is not surprising when it has both Golden Delicious and Cox in its parentage. The delicious, smooth skinned, yellow-orange fruits are ready to harvest from September, but will hang on the tree until December, and store well for up to 3 months if picked. Apple ‘Pinova’ is easy to grow and also has excellent resistance to mildew and scab. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Pinova’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. ‘Pinova’ is not self-fertile so for the heaviest crops it is best grown with another variety. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as suitable pollinator. Root wrap plant supplied. Height and spread: 2.5m (8’) Rootstock: M9. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |
Apple 'Croquella'Malus domestica, Patio fruit tree
The naturally dwarf habit of Apple ‘Croquella’ makes this French variety perfect for growing in containers. Good crops of bright red apples with crisp white flesh can be harvested from September onwards. This compact apple tree takes on a rather oriental appearance as it ages which forms a particularly attractive patio fruit tree. Apple ‘Croquella’ is partially self-fertile, but for the heaviest crops it is best grown with another variety to ensure good pollination. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as suitable pollinator. Height and spread: 120cm (48"). Rootstock: Pajam 9. Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here. More info |