If you could only have one fruit tree...
... (or two, if your Chosen One needs a pollinator), what would it be, and why?
We have room for a few fruit trees, and I'm having a terrible time narrowing down my choices -- I want them ALL. So maybe your opinions will help me prioritize my list!
I already know I want to plant Nikita's Gift persimmon (an American X Asian hybrid). Our woods are full of wild pawpaws, and we live in a peach-growing region so I can get all the tree-ripened peaches I want for cheap at the Farmer's Market. So those three fruits are taken care of. But what else???
We have room for a few fruit trees, and I'm having a terrible time narrowing down my choices -- I want them ALL. So maybe your opinions will help me prioritize my list!
I already know I want to plant Nikita's Gift persimmon (an American X Asian hybrid). Our woods are full of wild pawpaws, and we live in a peach-growing region so I can get all the tree-ripened peaches I want for cheap at the Farmer's Market. So those three fruits are taken care of. But what else???
no subject
A big question -- what fruits do you love enough to use up (eating fresh, canning, freezing, etc) when the trees are more mature. If you like plums fresh but don't like prunes, canned plums, plum jam, etc., it's not a good choice. For me, I adore plums, apricots, cherries, apples, and figs, for instance, so I've platned some of each of those (well, excpet the plums; we've got wild ones and a newer one that the previous owner put in).
A lot comes down to your climate, too. Some fruits need a certain number of chill hours in the winter, and if you're in a warm winter climate they won't be good choices. And some do best with hot summers. Others like or hate humidity. Finding varieties that thrive locally helps narrow down the possibilities a lot.
no subject
It would be hard to find a fruit that I *don't* love, except for maybe apricots. And I'll eat just about any kind of jam, so I don't think disposing of extra fruit will be a problem -- plus I could always sell it, if there was a truly overwhelming amount.
Apricots, pluots, Asian plums, and sweet cherries are out of the running, because our variable winter/spring weather causes them to bloom too early. But that still leaves apples and pears and European plums and nectarines and tart cherries and a whole bunch of oddball things like mayhaws and shipovas and quinces and the list goes on! And I want them ALL! *g*
So do the multi-grafted trees actually work out well? I always wondered if they were just a gimmick....
no subject
I planted a medlar last winter; I'm looking forward to that -- it's supposed to taste a bit like spiced applesauce!
I'd forgotten about quince. This winter I shall have to fix that oversight *g*
Nope, not a gimmick; just an example of grafting. I know someone who's enjoyed grafting for a couple decades on her quite large and venerable apple tree. She has over 50 varieties of apples on it now, I think.
I really enjoyed the multi fruit trees I had. The multi trees can be spendy though, and if you have inexpensive single trees available you can get a similar effect by planting 3 trees in one hole and tying or gently braiding them together. In time they grow together. I've not tried that, but read about it about 20 years ago and it still fascinates me.
more on cherries
Re: more on cherries