Hello all. I am slowly going mad trying to find an apple tree that meets my requirements, and any help on the subject would be very gratefully received.
I want to add an apple tree to my garden. I don't have any fruit trees, and hardly any knowledge of them. My requirements are as follows: easy to grow, good disease resistance, good vigour, ornamental shape preferred, good fruit flavour and keeping quality. Flavour is more important to me than yield. I don't mind pruning. And I'd prefer to go organic, but I'm not against spraying if this equals better results.
I'm looking for a dessert apple of the Cox's Orange Pippin type, but not the Cox itself.
I'm in Surrey on the North Downs. My chosen site is in the middle of a lawn approx 7m sq. It is atop a very gradual slope. It gets full sun much of the day. My soil is hard to categorise, best described as flinty clay. There is chalk down there too but its at least a meter down before you start finding pieces of it. The soil is fairly wet in winter, and bakes hard in summer. It can still be worked with a little effort. Most things in the garden flourish, and rhododendron grows happily alongside hawthorn and beech.
Following many hours of research, the following tree stood out for me:
Variety: Kidd's Orange Red - Flavour on par with Cox but better disease resistance
(except canker - I figured risk could be reduced when it came to preparing the planting hole).
The tree also has attractive crimson blossom.
Rootstock: MM106 - Mature height of 3-4m (but no higher than 4m). 4m spread.
Form: Half-Standard
Age at purchase: 2 years - Tree will have received initial pruning to establish form.
Bareroot or potted at purchase: Not sure. Each has pros and cons.
Further research has since uncovered other concerns:
The MM106 rootstock looks to be the most widely available, but also seems most prone to rots, not doing well in wet conditions, so a winter like we are currently experiencing would most likely ruin it. I find this contradicts the advice offered by nurseries that the MM106 rootstock is the best allrounder. M116 looks to be a better choice, but not widely available(?)
Every information source I've found, with the exception of the RHS, states Kidd's Orange Red has poor resistance to canker, which might not be fatal on its own, but combined with MM106 sounds like certain death in wet weather.
Also, despite the very attractive blossoms on this variety, one expert told me the tree had quite a distinct vertical habit which might not suit the half-standard form - I don't know what that means as I can't find any pictures of a mature Kidd's Orange Red tree.
So, I'm not sure what to do now. Any advice please
Phil
I want to add an apple tree to my garden. I don't have any fruit trees, and hardly any knowledge of them. My requirements are as follows: easy to grow, good disease resistance, good vigour, ornamental shape preferred, good fruit flavour and keeping quality. Flavour is more important to me than yield. I don't mind pruning. And I'd prefer to go organic, but I'm not against spraying if this equals better results.
I'm looking for a dessert apple of the Cox's Orange Pippin type, but not the Cox itself.
I'm in Surrey on the North Downs. My chosen site is in the middle of a lawn approx 7m sq. It is atop a very gradual slope. It gets full sun much of the day. My soil is hard to categorise, best described as flinty clay. There is chalk down there too but its at least a meter down before you start finding pieces of it. The soil is fairly wet in winter, and bakes hard in summer. It can still be worked with a little effort. Most things in the garden flourish, and rhododendron grows happily alongside hawthorn and beech.
Following many hours of research, the following tree stood out for me:
Variety: Kidd's Orange Red - Flavour on par with Cox but better disease resistance
(except canker - I figured risk could be reduced when it came to preparing the planting hole).
The tree also has attractive crimson blossom.
Rootstock: MM106 - Mature height of 3-4m (but no higher than 4m). 4m spread.
Form: Half-Standard
Age at purchase: 2 years - Tree will have received initial pruning to establish form.
Bareroot or potted at purchase: Not sure. Each has pros and cons.
Further research has since uncovered other concerns:
The MM106 rootstock looks to be the most widely available, but also seems most prone to rots, not doing well in wet conditions, so a winter like we are currently experiencing would most likely ruin it. I find this contradicts the advice offered by nurseries that the MM106 rootstock is the best allrounder. M116 looks to be a better choice, but not widely available(?)
Every information source I've found, with the exception of the RHS, states Kidd's Orange Red has poor resistance to canker, which might not be fatal on its own, but combined with MM106 sounds like certain death in wet weather.
Also, despite the very attractive blossoms on this variety, one expert told me the tree had quite a distinct vertical habit which might not suit the half-standard form - I don't know what that means as I can't find any pictures of a mature Kidd's Orange Red tree.
So, I'm not sure what to do now. Any advice please
Phil
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