Hello everyone, I would like to plant up half my allotment with fruit trees this winter but given that it's going to be a considerable investment I'm a bit nervous about making a stupid mistake!
The plan is to have several rows of espalier trees and I'm looking at:
Apples - I want to have a range of both taste and colour so I'm considering Scrumptious, Egremont Russet and Spartan.
Pear - maybe Williams. I love blush pears.
Peach - probably Avalon Pride as I've had horrible leaf curl on a container-grown peach before (even after bringing it indoors for the winter) and I know there's leaf curl on the site.
Plum - there's a plum tree on the site that produces the most gorgeous, huge blue-purple bloomed plums. Nobody knows what variety it is but Marjorie's Seedling sounds similar. Also, in the house I grew up in there was a fantastic plum producing green-yellow fruit - it produces more fruit every summer than four hungry and slightly feral children could eat I remember one of my parents saying they thought it was a gage rather than a plum, so I'm looking at Oullin's Golden gage or Cambridge gage.
Cherry - would love to have one black and one red so looking at Kordia and Stella
Possibly an apricot fan-trained against the south side of the shed - looking at Tomcot.
Do these seem like sensible choices? Are there any suppliers that you'd recommend or advise to steer clear of? Blackmoor and Keepers both seem pretty good (and it's good to see them recommended on here) but I'm fairly late in the season so not everything I want is in stock there. Would I be better off leaving it another year rather than buying from a less reputable supplier?
Things to consider:
- We're in London, and in an area that was once an orchard before it was all built up (a number of trees from then still surviving in back gardens. None in ours sadly).
- Allotment site rule is trees to be kept under 2m (although there are several that are taller and the managers seem to be a bit relaxed about them).
- Like most Londoners with a family, we don't know if we'll be here forever so I don't really want trees that will take over 5 years to see a return.
- I'm looking for fruit that aren't easily available in supermarkets, but don't need a huge amount of work/expertise.
Sorry for the mammoth long post!
The plan is to have several rows of espalier trees and I'm looking at:
Apples - I want to have a range of both taste and colour so I'm considering Scrumptious, Egremont Russet and Spartan.
Pear - maybe Williams. I love blush pears.
Peach - probably Avalon Pride as I've had horrible leaf curl on a container-grown peach before (even after bringing it indoors for the winter) and I know there's leaf curl on the site.
Plum - there's a plum tree on the site that produces the most gorgeous, huge blue-purple bloomed plums. Nobody knows what variety it is but Marjorie's Seedling sounds similar. Also, in the house I grew up in there was a fantastic plum producing green-yellow fruit - it produces more fruit every summer than four hungry and slightly feral children could eat I remember one of my parents saying they thought it was a gage rather than a plum, so I'm looking at Oullin's Golden gage or Cambridge gage.
Cherry - would love to have one black and one red so looking at Kordia and Stella
Possibly an apricot fan-trained against the south side of the shed - looking at Tomcot.
Do these seem like sensible choices? Are there any suppliers that you'd recommend or advise to steer clear of? Blackmoor and Keepers both seem pretty good (and it's good to see them recommended on here) but I'm fairly late in the season so not everything I want is in stock there. Would I be better off leaving it another year rather than buying from a less reputable supplier?
Things to consider:
- We're in London, and in an area that was once an orchard before it was all built up (a number of trees from then still surviving in back gardens. None in ours sadly).
- Allotment site rule is trees to be kept under 2m (although there are several that are taller and the managers seem to be a bit relaxed about them).
- Like most Londoners with a family, we don't know if we'll be here forever so I don't really want trees that will take over 5 years to see a return.
- I'm looking for fruit that aren't easily available in supermarkets, but don't need a huge amount of work/expertise.
Sorry for the mammoth long post!
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