
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Apples
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Choose the Right Varieties
- Look for disease-resistant trees, such as ‘Liberty’, ‘Jonafree’, ‘Macfree’, and ‘Williams Pride’, which will give you the ability to grow organic fruit or to use fewer chemicals. Maintenance is easier, too.
- You need to choose a rootstock. All apple trees sold have 2 parts: a “rootstock” or foundation and a “scion” or top portion, determining the fruit variety. A rootstock can be “seedling” or “standard” (which produces a full-size tree), or it can be “dwarfing” or “size-controlling” (which produces a smaller tree for easier care and harvest).
- For dwarf trees, make sure that the rootstock is specified. A Bud 9 is a common, hardy tree that’s easy to train for USDA Climate Zones 3 to 5. The M9 is probably the most widely planted rootstock, though it could die in frigid winters.
- Buy dormant, bare-root, 1-year-old nursery trees with good root systems. Dwarfs and semi-dwarfs will bear in 3 to 4 years, yielding 1 to 2 bushels per year. Standard-size trees will bear in 5 to 8 years, yielding 4 to 5 bushels of apples per year.
- The variety of apple selected should be based on fruit characteristics, bloom time, and pollen compatibility. Consult a local nursery to see which trees are potential cross-pollinators in your area. For best results, include a ‘Grimes Golden’, ‘Golden Delicious’, ‘Red Delicious’, or ‘Winter Banana’ in your planting. These varieties are known pollinators. Crabapple trees can also be used as pollinators if they bloom simultaneously as the desired variety. Nursery catalogs will provide pollination charts.
- Most apple varieties do not pollinate themselves or any flowers of the same apple variety; this requires planting at least two different apple tree varieties close to one another so that the bees can pollinate. (There are actually some self-pollinating apple tree varieties if you are really short on space. However, even these apple trees will bear more fruit if cross-pollinated.)
Also, consider how you will use your apples: Do you love to bake apple pies? Or, perhaps you just want apples that taste far better than what you could buy in a grocery store. See Best Apples for Baking for more information.
- A young dwarf tree produces about 1 1/2 bushels of fruit—and even less when the tree is part of an apple hedge. So, if you’re interested in baking lots of ‘Cox’s Orange Pippin’ apple pies, you’ll need to plant several trees of that variety to get enough fruit.
- If you have no particular culinary goal, try planting one of each different variety that ripen over the entire harvest season. Then, you can enjoy regular apple tastings and still have enough fruit on hand for a “mess” of cooked apples.
- Seek out the advice of local orchardists about the varieties that will do well in your area. Do the bulk of your planning from an easy chair with a half-dozen nursery catalogs in your lap!
Cooking Notes
- You can freeze apples by stewing washed chunks with a dash of water until they soften. Once ready, sieve and pour the stewed apples into containers, leaving a small space at the top as they will expand slightly when frozen, and pop into the freezer.
- You can also cut your fruits into thin slices then dry them out in a dehydrator to make a deliciously chewy and healthy snack.
- Planning to bake or cook your apples into an apple pie or meal? See our chart on the best baking and cooking apples in North America.
“Baked apples have an excellent effect upon the whole physical system, feeding the brain as well as adding to the flesh, and keeping the blood pure; also preventing constipation and correcting a tendency to acidity, which produces rheumatism and neuralgia.” –The 1898 Old Farmer’s Almanac
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When is the correct time to spray young apple trees for bugs and disease?
Hi, Ralph: Thanks for this great question, the answers to which in some part depend on your location, what types of apples you have, and whether there are known infestations on hand or nearby. The best thing to do is an online search for “when spray apple trees” and then read up on the subject. But basically the thing to do is neem oil now to get at any overwintering pests, and then a fixed copper spray right before bloom for brown rot and fire blight. Then come the times throughout spring and summer when various organic pesticides and fungicides might be necessary. So, do an online search, but also contact (or go online to) your local state cooperative extension service—they will be your absolute best source of information on when to do what for apples. Thanks again, and good luck! P.S. We should add that the #1 mistake that people make in spraying apple trees is not in the timing or in what is being sprayed, but in not being thorough enough.
I am interested in farming. I now want to procure apple seeds from south Africa and cultivate it in Ghana....I live in the middle belt of Ghana ,we have temperate weather. is it possible to cultivate apples which are imported from SA in Ghana????
Very good.
Thanks for all the advices,I am better educated to go back Apple farming.
Please I live in Ghana a country in west Africa. I'm interested in growing apple at my area Ashanti Mampong in Ashanti Region, but I don't know if if my location will favour the plant. Please kindly help me with this issue
Hello Dwomoh -
I do not know about your exact region, but apple trees require a period of dormancy provided by cold weather. As written in the article above, depending on the variety of tree, you will need a period of the year when the temperatures drop below freezing up to 45 degree F (again, based on particular variety). If you are in a higher mountain zone or if your winters can provide this climate you may have a chance, but you would need to look for varieties that can grow in the warmest zones, such as those that can be grown in the southern United States. These varieties include Bevenś Favorite, Aunt Rachel, Mary Reid, Hunge, Cauley, Gala, Summer Banana, Mollies Delicious, Virginia Winesap, Blacktwig, Goldrush, Johnson Keeper, Yates, Dixie Red.
I hope this is helpful to you.
I want to plant apple trees in my farm as soon as possible, but my problem is skills and knowledge, good planting materials, source of seeds or seedlings, related soil suitability, weather factors, market for selling products or market information, approachable price, and extentionist contacts.
I started from seed apple trees (2) in the fall I will put them on our 3 season porch, will the leaves fall and trees become dormant
Do you live in an area with cold winters? Apple trees do require chill hours. They will go dormant in their pots if left on an unheated porch.