There are over a thousand apple varieties, which gives you
plenty to choose from. A few well-tested varieties, such as
Gravenstein, Golden Delicious, Grimes, Rome Beauty, and
Yellow Transparent, should be the basic stock of your
orchard, but try some of the lesser-known ones as well.
Apple trees tend to bring surprises, and a well-cared-for
minor variety may give you the most wonderful fruit.
RELATED ARTICLES
GARDEN & YARD - MOTHER'S FALL GUIDE TO PLANTING THE GARDEN, LAWN, AND ORCHARD October/November 1995...
Here's the story of a California scientist and an organic apple farmer combing efforts to protect t...
Put your unwanted fruit and vegetables outside the fence to keep animals out of your garden....
The ecological and environmental benefits of planting more trees, including reasoning and tree plan...
Nick Botner, an Oregon orchardist, grows 3,000 varieties of apples on grafted trees....
Apples will grow almost anywhere in the United States
except in the hottest regions. They need the cool-to-cold
winters during dormancy. Your local nursery will no doubt
give you an indication of not only the feasibility of
growing apples, but the best varieties for that area as
well.
STOCK
Apple trees, except for the dwarfs, which bear small crops
in their second or third year, usually won't give you any
apples until their fifth to sixth year. But by the tenth
year they're at peak production, yielding five to ten
bushels per tree per year. And they will keep bearing for
thirty years or more. So order two varieties at the very
least. Not just because thirty or forty bushels of one kind
might become a bit boring, but because some are eating
apples and some for cooking. Also cross-fertilization will
increase your crop. Stock usually comes in one-, two-, or
three-year-olds. You'll find the older ones more expensive,
of course. On the other hand, being transplants, they are
usually sturdier trees. Bought from a good nursery, two- to
three-year-olds are your best bet.
PRUNING
If you buy two- or three-year-old transplants, they should
need no pruning the first two years besides the initial one
on planting to eliminate injured roots and take the wood
down a bit proportionately.
After the first two years, your primary pruning job will be
to make the tree easy to pick from and somewhat squat in
shape. The center of the tree must be kept open . . . don't
let the growth get too dense. Cut off branches that cross
and rub against each other in the wind. Any branch so large
it can't be pruned off with shears, should be cut in three
stages with a saw, as shown in the diagram.
As the tree grows older, you will notice small, short
cluster branches of buds developing along the real
branches. These must not be cut off . . . they're the
bearing spurs that will give you your fruit.
The spurs will bear lovely flowers . . . in fact, too many
of them. If you walk through your orchard one day during
blossom time and notice a host of pink and white petals
falling, don't faint. It's quite natural. The tree would
otherwise bear far too much fruit for it to carry and these
dropping flowers are its natural way of cutting back the
crop. Even so, once the fruit sets, you will probably have
to tree-cull some of it. Don't let the young apples crowd
each other. Not only can their weight break the branch, but
too many apples spoil the crop.