Please help, I have a lovely victoria plum tree bearing loads of fruit now my question is if I plant a stone,pip in the garden will it come up the same ?
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Originally posted by gullivar33 View PostIf the stone comes from inside of the plum why will it not be victoria ?
Also, even if it did come up true to type, seed-grown trees take years before they start cropping and they grow massive. Normally fruit trees are grafted into dwarfing rootstocks which keep the tree at a more manageable size and make it crop sooner.
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Originally posted by gullivar33 View PostIf the stone comes from inside of the plum why will it not be victoria ?
This is why fruit trees are grafted/ budded
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i found two young plants by my victoria plum and a greengage, i dont know if they are both the parents but the fruit is cherry sized and quite a good flavour and its growing in a 50ltr tub quite happily, the other one hasnt done anything yet so we will see what happens as it is younger than the other.
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Originally posted by BUFFS View Posti found two young plants by my victoria plum and a greengage, i dont know if they are both the parents but the fruit is cherry sized and quite a good flavour and its growing in a 50ltr tub quite happily, the other one hasnt done anything yet so we will see what happens as it is younger than the other.
The common rootstock varieties for plums are all actually a different species, namely the cherry plum, and those fruit you describe would fit that.
St Julian A (the most common plum root stock), specifically, is actually supposedly tasty and a good fruiter, albeit can grow a bit large, so it's probably that.
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the new plants were too far away from the parent plants to be suckers, over 10 ft away each one, the older plant gives cherry sized fruit that taste of sweet plums but no fruit ever on the other, so we get a bowl of fruit each year but never get a glut..
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Originally posted by BUFFS View Postthe new plants were too far away from the parent plants to be suckers, over 10 ft away each one, the older plant gives cherry sized fruit that taste of sweet plums but no fruit ever on the other, so we get a bowl of fruit each year but never get a glut..
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I constantly get St julian A suckers 10ft or so from the base of the tree. St Julian is thorny, producing small fruits.Last edited by Dave8abond; 06-09-2022, 07:09 PM.
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Originally posted by Dave8abond View PostI constantly get St julian A suckers 10ft or so from the base of the tree. St Julian is thorny, producing small fruits.
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Quote from Walcot nursery 'On its own St Julien will result in a shrubby quite thorny tree producing damson like fruits'. https://walcotnursery.co.uk/product/plum-rootstock/
A couple of years ago i was working in a large neglected orchard. They had 30 or so plums on St Julian and there were 6 to 8ft suckers everywhere that very much fitted the above description. I've never grown any out personally.
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