Don't forget that growing apples is as much about choosing a suitable rootstock as choosing a good fruiting variety. Without roots a tree is nothing.
I particularly like the M25 rootstock for its vigour and its ability to both grow well and crop heavily; M25 was selected to replace the old M16 because of M25's unique combination of coming into heavy cropping just as quickly as dwarfs do, combined with the ability of M25 to simultaneously grow into a good-sized and very-long-lived apple tree if left to do its own thing.
For my unique situation of a light sandy-gravelly-chalky soil the MM111 rootstock does well; making a MM106-type tree where MM106 will not tolerate the dryness of the soil.
At the moment, my MM106's are feeling the stress of the low-rainfall in recent weeks: leaves are going yellow/crispy and falling; fruits have stopped growing at the size of small cherries - the crop from the MM106's will be worthless again this year. Only in the wet years - most recently 2012 - do I get a decent crop from the MM106 trees.
edit: my rootstock vote goes to M25 rootstock because it's nowhere near as scary-vigorous and slow-to-fruit as "the books" will have us believe. Of course, if you put a Bramley on any rootstock it's going to make an unusually large tree simply because Bramley is such a monster; I have a Bramley on "semi-dwarf" M26 and it's still a monster - as vigorous as some of my "normal" varieties on MM111 or M25.
I particularly like the M25 rootstock for its vigour and its ability to both grow well and crop heavily; M25 was selected to replace the old M16 because of M25's unique combination of coming into heavy cropping just as quickly as dwarfs do, combined with the ability of M25 to simultaneously grow into a good-sized and very-long-lived apple tree if left to do its own thing.
For my unique situation of a light sandy-gravelly-chalky soil the MM111 rootstock does well; making a MM106-type tree where MM106 will not tolerate the dryness of the soil.
At the moment, my MM106's are feeling the stress of the low-rainfall in recent weeks: leaves are going yellow/crispy and falling; fruits have stopped growing at the size of small cherries - the crop from the MM106's will be worthless again this year. Only in the wet years - most recently 2012 - do I get a decent crop from the MM106 trees.
edit: my rootstock vote goes to M25 rootstock because it's nowhere near as scary-vigorous and slow-to-fruit as "the books" will have us believe. Of course, if you put a Bramley on any rootstock it's going to make an unusually large tree simply because Bramley is such a monster; I have a Bramley on "semi-dwarf" M26 and it's still a monster - as vigorous as some of my "normal" varieties on MM111 or M25.
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