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Apple & Pear Trees


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.



We have found 18 products.
 

Apple 'Pixirosso'

Malus domestica

 Customer Rating

A real gem! When fully ripe, the fresh, crisp flesh is a spectacular bright pink-red colour, with dramatic white flashes running through it. Unlike many red-fleshed apples that have been bred in the past this delicious and visually stunning apple has a lovely sweet flavour. Apple ‘Pixirosso’ is a vigorous grower with pretty red blossom and attractive red foliage. The fruits can be harvested from October.


Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Pixirosso’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. Apple ‘Pixirosso’ is not self fertile so it is best grown with another mid season flowering group 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: 2m (6’) Rootstock: M9.


Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
Estimated time to best yields: 4 years.


Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide


Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here.

More info
    • 1 root wrap tree

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    •  
    • £27.99

Pear 'Red William'

Pyrus communis

  • NEW in 2013

Pear ‘Red William’ is a wonderful red version of one of the most popular pear varieties in the world. This red ‘clone’ is just as sweet as the original William’s pear but with the added attraction of red skin and being slightly more dwarf than Pear ‘Williams Bon Chretien’.


Grafted onto 'Quince A' rootstock to produce a tree with moderate vigour and promote fruiting at an early age. These strong growing trees are partially self-fertile but make the ideal planting partner for Conference or Concorde to aid pollination and increase the yield. 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. Rootstock: Quince A. Height and spread: 3m (9’).


Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
Estimated time to best yields: 6 years.


Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide

More info
    • 1 root wrap tree

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    •  
    • £24.99

Apple and Pear Family Collection

Malus 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.
Estimated time to best yields: 5 years.


Collection comprises 1 family apple tree and 1 family pear. Harvest from September.


  • Family apple tree varieties:
  • Apple ‘James Grieve’ – An excellent dual-use apple for cooking and eating.
  • Apple ‘Discovery’ – An ever-popular early variety of dessert apple with a refreshing juicy flavour.
  • Apple ‘Sunset’ – A good alternative to the desirable ‘Cox’ variety, and much easier to grow.

  • Family pear varieties:
  • Pear ‘Conference’ – One of the best known dessert pears, and tolerant of even cold, shady positions.
  • Pear ‘Williams Bon Chretien’ – Often simply known as ‘Williams’, the fruits of this superb pear turn yellow as flesh ripens.
  • Pear ‘Doyenne du Comice’ – A classic dessert pear with a sweet, juicy flavour.

Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide

More info
    • 2 trees - 1 of each variety

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    • SAVE £9.99  
    • £79.98 £69.99

Apple 'Tydemans Late Orange'

Malus domestica

  • NEW in 2013

A popular cross between ‘Laxton's Superb’ and ‘Cox's Orange Pippin’, producing Cox-style apples with a later season and sharper flavour. Early November harvests of Apple 'Tydemans Late Orange' are intensely rich and aromatic with a tangy, sharp flavour. Later, the fruit mellows and sweetens, storing well through to April.

Grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock, the crowns of ‘Tydemans Late Orange’ apple trees are easily reached to prune, spray and pick your delicious fruit. Apple ‘Tydemans Late Orange’ is self fertile making it ideal for gardens where there is only room for one tree. Height and spread: 3m (10’) Rootstock: M26.


Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
Estimated time to best yields: 5 years.


Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide


Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here.

More info
    • 1 root wrap tree

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    •  
    • £24.99

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.
Estimated time to best yields: 5 years.


Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide


Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here.

More info
    • 1 root wrap tree

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    •  
    • £33.99
    • 1 tree

    • Despatch: Nov 2012 To Mid Apr 2013
    •  
    • £29.99

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.
Estimated time to best yields: 3 years.


Useful links:

How to grow fruit treesFruit rootstock guide


Culinary note: Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here.

More info
    • 1 root wrap tree

    • Despatch: November - April 2014
    •  
    • £24.99