Originally posted by sammy_roser
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So I would usually recommend a one-year maiden, or at most a two-year-old half-standard.
In any case, you'll be lucky to find a MM111 of a suitable variety, let alone a MM111 which is a few years old.
Given the awkward location, I'd suggest seeing whether you can pick up a cheap Bramley on MM106 (despite what I said earlier) during the late-winter stock clearance or from somewhere like Morrison's, ALDI, LIDL or other discounter.
It'd only cost a about a fiver (the cheapest MM111 would be about £15, plus another £10 postage) and a cheap tree would be less to lose if things didn't go well. But MM106 must be planted on a generous mound to prevent root rot.
I'd suggest, for an MM106, to make a small mound (say six inches high and 4ft across) and stand the Bramley on top (so all the roots are out of the heavy clay) and then build a mound over all of the roots.
Bramley is a monster that is one of the best of the cheap and easy-to-find options for a difficult location.
I wouldn't be surprised if the tree is so vigorous (due to the Bramley bit) that the MM106 rootstock will be able to outgrow wet-soil diseases that would normally kill other trees.
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