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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 'Bramley's Seedling'Malus domestica The most famous cooking apple of all, producing large fruits with a sharp acidic flavour that are ideal for making delicious pies and crumbles. Awarded an RHS AGM, Apple ‘Bramley’s Seedling’ has good disease resistance to scab and mildew. Pick ‘Bramley’ apples from October when mature for immediate use or lay the fruits in a cool dry place for winter storage. They will store for up to 3 months. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Bramley’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. All ‘Bramley’s Seedling’ apple trees are 'triploids' and will set a partial crop by themselves. However, for the heaviest crops they are best grown with another apple. 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. 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 '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 'Egremont Russet'Malus domestica A mid-season dessert apple producing a heavy crop of distinctive russet-bronze fruits, with firm, crisp flesh and a rich, nutty flavour. An excellent apple for the cheese board! Apple ‘Egremont Russet’ is self fertile and easy to grow, making it ideal for gardens where there is only room for one tree. It also makes an excellent pollinator for ‘Cox’ and ‘Braeburn’ varieties. Harvest the apples in October, and you can keep them well until January. Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Egremont Russet’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. 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 |
Pear CollectionPyrus communis The perfect collection to provide heavy crops of delicious pears for preserving, poaching or eating straight from the tree. Grow these varieties close to each other to improve pollination and increase crop yields. Grafted onto 'Quince A' rootstock to produce trees with moderate vigour and promote fruiting at an early age. Rootstock: Quince A. Height and spread: 3m (9’). Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
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Quince 'Vranja'Cydonia oblonga An attractive tree with beautiful rounded silver leaves and pretty green-pink flowers in spring. The large, fragrant, pear shaped fruits that follow ripen to a lovely shade of yellow, and can be harvested from October. Freshly picked quinces are bitter and inedible, but once cooked they soften to make excellent jams and jellies, and enhance the flavour of apple pies when a few slices are added before cooking. Quince ‘Vranja’ is propagated onto ‘Quince A’ rootstock. It is self-fertile and therefore does not require a pollination companion. Height and spread: 4m (13’). Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Useful links: More info |
Crab Apple 'Golden Hornet'Malus x zumi Pink buds open to reveal pretty white cup shaped blossom in April and May, followed by spectacular crops of bright golden-yellow fruits that make an eye-catching autumn display and hold on the tree well into winter. Crab Apple ‘Golden Hornet’ makes an attractive and productive specimen tree for smaller gardens, with a long season of interest. Crab apple fruits can be harvested to make delicious crab apple jelly. Any unpicked fruits will soften after a few frosts to create a sumptuous food source for wild birds. Crab apples are self fertile and if planted near orchard apple trees make excellent pollinators. Rootstock: M26. Height and spread: 3m (10’).Estimated time to cropping once planted: 1 year. 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 and Pear Family CollectionMalus domestica, Pyrus communis An 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). Apple rootstock: M106. Pear rootstock: Quince A. Height and spread if not containerised: 4m (13’). Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years. Collection comprises 1 family apple tree and 1 family pear. Harvest from September.
Useful links: 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 |