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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Apples
Cooking Notes
- You can freeze apples by stewing washed chunks with a dash of water until they soften. Once ready, sieve and pour the stewed apples into containers, leaving a small space at the top as they will expand slightly when frozen, and pop into the freezer.
- You can also cut your fruits into thin slices then dry them out in a dehydrator to make a deliciously chewy and healthy snack.
- Planning to bake or cook your apples into an apple pie or meal? See our chart on the best baking and cooking apples in North America.
“Baked apples have an excellent effect upon the whole physical system, feeding the brain as well as adding to the flesh, and keeping the blood pure; also preventing constipation and correcting a tendency to acidity, which produces rheumatism and neuralgia.” –The 1898 Old Farmer’s
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Hi Dirk,
It should not be problem as long as the trees get enough sun and pollinators can find them. Do a bit of research on how big the variety you choose will grow and don't plant them too close.
I have a 30+ year old decorative apple tree which produces small 1/2" fruit most every year. I also this last winter grew several Red Delicious trees from seed. After these grow a couple years can they be grafted onto the old thee and will they produce Red Delicious apples. This is eastern Kansas area.
Growing apples from seed isn't going to work. The apple tree has an extraordinary number of genes. The progeny will never resemble the parent that it came from. Most apples are not good for eating which is why discovering a good variety is a real treasure. From there they are cloned and grafted onto a good rootstock. You will never get red delicious apples from planting the seeds of a red delicious. You will most likely end up with a fruit that is inedible.
I live in Toronto and just bought a 4 in 1 Apple Tree for my small back yard(Beni Shogun Fuji, Honeycrisp, Chehalis,Akane). Are they good combination? some say 4 in 1 grafted apple trees are not good. What do you think about 4 in 1 grafted apple trees? how to take good care of them? thank you
Hi, Jeff: 4-in-1 grafted apple trees are perfectly OK, provided they are cared for properly -- please read the tips above. If there is a way, you should try to plant it to the south of a structure of some sort, so that it gets maximum sun but is protected from the NW winds. Have fun!
Hi
I'm in the UK.
We brought an apple tree last year and were told it was a sweet type of apple variety by the incompetent garden center staff. It however has a very tarty sharp almost citric like flavor. The apples are a golden yellow tinged with red. I lost the label and was wondering what type it would be? It's ready to harvest mid October and has a profusion of fruit.
I have now purchased another apple tree( and been told it is a dessert apple for sure.It;s a different garden center. The last tree we brought fruited the same year. Is it possible for this to happen this year? I will plant it this week.
i just would like to know how manny years it will take
I have a granny Smith Apple tree a about 7yrs old. Just wondering what would cause the newly setting fruit to become yellow and fall off
Apple drop can happen for many reasons. If it's this early, the issue is usually pollination. Most apple varieties in your yard need another apple tree within 100 feet of your tree. Another reason is pollination due to lack of bees or poor weather.
Finally, apples do some natural fruit dropping because the trees wouldn't be able to support the load if every single flower developed into a full-sized apple. It's a good idea to thin your tree every year; a good rule of thumb is one apple for every 40 to 50 leaves.
I have 2 dwarf apple trees' 1 red delicious and 1 yellow delicious. The are still green in side, the height they are suppose to be, very few limbs, not filled out like most with lots of limbs, bark is light and dark grey, gets full of leaves, but no fruit yet. Trees about 10 years old but look like 2 years old. Live in TN. USDA Zone 7a. Trees planted side by side, about 10 feet a part and I have never had to trim them, not enough limbs to trim. Trunk is about 5 inches round. Other fruit trees doing good but no fruit, same age. What am I doing wrong?