thistlebloom
Garden Master
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2010
- Messages
- 16,473
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- Location
- North Idaho 48th parallel
Several years ago, (seven, eight, ten?? I don't know...) I bought 5 bare root Prairie Fire crabapples to plant down the driveway. I love their bloom and fall color and the brilliant red crabs that hang on the tree most of the winter.
Well 4 of the 5 didn't survive above the graft, so now I have a motley collection of root stock apple trees. The surviving PF happens to be precisely in the center so it looks like I might have planted them with my eyes open at least.
The last few years there have been a sort of effort among these root stocks to bloom, and set a few apples. I tried one or two now and then and decided they were pretty good - if you were a hungry deer.
But! This year was their year! They had so many apples (2 of the 4 anyway) that one broke a limb, and the others were sagging under the weight.
Long story short, we have some wonderful new neighbors with three kids that love to visit all of our animals, and they asked (politely too!) if they could pick and eat some apples. Sure, but they aren't very tasty I told them. Weelllll, they took a bite and declared them delicious. ( You know how kids have funny taste buds.)
I had to try one too, and they were so right! One of the trees has an almost Honeycrisp flavor, and the other two are more along the lines of a Granny Smith.
I am rich in apples!!! It's such a delightful surprise that these trees are actually going to be productive and useful, not just a pretty face, but hard working assets.
We invited the family to come pick as many as they wanted, and as a thank you, the mom made us 3 quarts of her ready to use apple pie filling. I made a pie last night and it was fantastic!
I'm hustling over there after work and getting the recipe and then you know what I'll be doing this weekend. Isn't it wonderful?
Well 4 of the 5 didn't survive above the graft, so now I have a motley collection of root stock apple trees. The surviving PF happens to be precisely in the center so it looks like I might have planted them with my eyes open at least.
The last few years there have been a sort of effort among these root stocks to bloom, and set a few apples. I tried one or two now and then and decided they were pretty good - if you were a hungry deer.
But! This year was their year! They had so many apples (2 of the 4 anyway) that one broke a limb, and the others were sagging under the weight.
Long story short, we have some wonderful new neighbors with three kids that love to visit all of our animals, and they asked (politely too!) if they could pick and eat some apples. Sure, but they aren't very tasty I told them. Weelllll, they took a bite and declared them delicious. ( You know how kids have funny taste buds.)
I had to try one too, and they were so right! One of the trees has an almost Honeycrisp flavor, and the other two are more along the lines of a Granny Smith.
I am rich in apples!!! It's such a delightful surprise that these trees are actually going to be productive and useful, not just a pretty face, but hard working assets.
We invited the family to come pick as many as they wanted, and as a thank you, the mom made us 3 quarts of her ready to use apple pie filling. I made a pie last night and it was fantastic!
I'm hustling over there after work and getting the recipe and then you know what I'll be doing this weekend. Isn't it wonderful?