I only have space for one 'proper' fruit tree in my garden so I'm going to buy an apple tree.
I'm also planning to grow espalier or fan forms of plums and pears up my south facing fence.
Many plum varieties are described as "self fertile". Does this mean 'sort of' self-fertile, as would be the case with apples, or genuinely self-fertile, as with soft fruit? Will I truly get just as much fruit with just one tree?
For pears, I know I need a pollination partner for the tree I plan to buy - which is Doyenne du Comice. So my question is slightly different: how likely is it that pollination will be taken care of by other pear trees in the vicinity? I'm in a fairly densely populated urban area, with small gardens but lots of potential pear-growers! I'm hoping there must be some near-neighbours with pear trees in their gardens. I'm also about half a mile from some allotments.
I'm mainly motivated for not wanting to fork out another 30 quid each for cordons that would then be quite hard to squeeze into the space available.
I'm also planning to grow espalier or fan forms of plums and pears up my south facing fence.
Many plum varieties are described as "self fertile". Does this mean 'sort of' self-fertile, as would be the case with apples, or genuinely self-fertile, as with soft fruit? Will I truly get just as much fruit with just one tree?
For pears, I know I need a pollination partner for the tree I plan to buy - which is Doyenne du Comice. So my question is slightly different: how likely is it that pollination will be taken care of by other pear trees in the vicinity? I'm in a fairly densely populated urban area, with small gardens but lots of potential pear-growers! I'm hoping there must be some near-neighbours with pear trees in their gardens. I'm also about half a mile from some allotments.
I'm mainly motivated for not wanting to fork out another 30 quid each for cordons that would then be quite hard to squeeze into the space available.
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