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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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Like chukwuemeka odum of Nigeria, i am interested in growing apples. i live in the grasslands of the nortrh-west region of Cameroon which has two seasons a year: a wet season from mid-march to oct. and a dry season from nov. to early march (no rain, hot and dusty). i would like to know more about its cultivation and where to get viable seeds. is nwanza misheck still interested in incorporation, as he aptly puts it?
I am thinking about planting a apple seed if i plant the seed within the next month or so would it be ready to plant outside in spring
16th December 2015 in UK we collected seeds from our ancient orchard, rinsed and dried them and laid them on kitchen roll, covered with a sheet of kitchen roll, put into a ziplock bag and left in fridge.on 1st March some were just beginning to sprout so we put them in mini pots with earth, not compost. in 3 weeks they were sprouting well - having been left on a sunny window sill and watered twice a day. They were transplanted into larger fibre pots on 22nd March and are now around 4" high, each with 7 leaves. We had 70 seeds and we now have a potential 35 trees. We'll do it again late this year after the apple harvest but, after they've sprouted we'll put them straight into the fibre pots to avoid damaging the fragile roots in transplanting time. We haven't big potted them yet, the frosts are still with us so they're staying indoors. Hope this is helpful.
Hi, Caitlyn: This is sort of a tricky question, because a lot depends on the type, health, and origin of the apple from which the seed comes. The short answer is, Sure, go ahead and plant it, and if it is going to germinate, it will certainly do so before next spring. Good luck!
What can I do to help my apple tree to grow. It's been planted for 2 seasons now and the over all tree size hasn't changed much. It's a New Zealand Green Apple tree and according to the tag on the tree it should grow up to 20 feet. The first season it produced 12 apples and this season it has produced about 30 apples but the tree hasn't grown any bigger. I live in Northern California and our summers are very hot AVG 110 degrees and our fall and spring temps are usually in the 80's during the days and low 50's in the night, winters can get down to the low 30's. Any suggestion would be helpful
I would like you to introduce apple growing in Kenya
over the years since 1998 i have planted apple treesand pair trees. every march i prune back the sucker branches that grow strait up close to main tree. i use fertilizer sticks, have two of same trees of a couple different varities. i have even planted a crab apple. i have healthy looking trees, well drained soil and plenty of sunlite but i never seem to get much yield when neighbors seem to get much more yield and they do very little. 90%of my trees are dwarfs but two trees in particular that are the biggest and oldest have never produced at all and i wrestle over cutting them down and putting 4 dwarfs in there place. i dont spray anything at all except for the first time this year i sprayed a couple of qypsy months early on while they were just emerging from there tents. any suggestions???
desperate for answer
sean mckenna
Sir, I would want to know if apple trees grow well in Africa, more especially in Nigeria.I am very interested in going into this farming,but I would want to start it from the the nursery. How would I get the seeds and also what is the soil preparation for the nursery like.
Regards
As per name am I,exactly your mind is my ambition,to start up an apple farm.
I decided to reply to ask if at all you might be interested in incoperation in such a business.
Thank you
I have 2 red delicious apple trees and 1 Macintosh. Last year 1 red started dropping leaves and this year both reds dropped leaves. Both trees are almost bare but still have apples. I sprayed up until I had blossoms then stopped because I don't want insecticide/fungicide on the apples. Why did my red's drop all their leaves but still have apples? They haven't ripened yet but some are turning red now. What is the cause, what can be done. I have to say that when I was spraying the tree's had full green leaves, they dried up and fell off.