There seems no end in sight to the supermarket dominance of Gala, Braeburn and their descendants, from what I've read in the recent weekly journal entries on 'The English Apple Man's' website:-
The English Apple Man, informing consumers about how the apples they buy*are grown, harvested and marketed
(well worth reading if you're interested in what's going on in the UK's commercial fruit growing sector, plus research developments.)
He mentions two new apple varieties hitting the UK supermarkets, both bred in New Zealand:-
'Envy' (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
'Smitten' (parentage: Gala, Braeburn, Falstaff, Fiesta)
The parentage of many of the other current/modern supermarket varieties is similar:-
Jazz (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
Kanzi (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
Rubens (parents: Gala x Elstar)
Sonya (parents: Gala x Red Delicious)
Cameo (possible Red Delicious seedling)
Zari (parentage involves Elstar and Delbardestivale)
(thanks to orange pippin's site for info on parents of some of the above)
Whilst I appreciate these varieties 'provide the taste demanded by today's consumer ' , the problem for the amateur/garden/allotment grower is that you aren't allowed to grow some of them yourself, because they are commercially-protected. It seems like a bit of a 'Monsanto moment.' I imagine that some of the new varieties will eventually be released to the public and, in their time, will become tomorrow's heritage varieties - but maybe not.
I've just bought a Braeburn tree from Morrison's for £5 - it will be potted up and locked away, kept purely for breeding purposes.
The English Apple Man, informing consumers about how the apples they buy*are grown, harvested and marketed
(well worth reading if you're interested in what's going on in the UK's commercial fruit growing sector, plus research developments.)
He mentions two new apple varieties hitting the UK supermarkets, both bred in New Zealand:-
'Envy' (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
'Smitten' (parentage: Gala, Braeburn, Falstaff, Fiesta)
The parentage of many of the other current/modern supermarket varieties is similar:-
Jazz (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
Kanzi (parents: Gala x Braeburn)
Rubens (parents: Gala x Elstar)
Sonya (parents: Gala x Red Delicious)
Cameo (possible Red Delicious seedling)
Zari (parentage involves Elstar and Delbardestivale)
(thanks to orange pippin's site for info on parents of some of the above)
Whilst I appreciate these varieties 'provide the taste demanded by today's consumer ' , the problem for the amateur/garden/allotment grower is that you aren't allowed to grow some of them yourself, because they are commercially-protected. It seems like a bit of a 'Monsanto moment.' I imagine that some of the new varieties will eventually be released to the public and, in their time, will become tomorrow's heritage varieties - but maybe not.
I've just bought a Braeburn tree from Morrison's for £5 - it will be potted up and locked away, kept purely for breeding purposes.
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