Apples

You are viewing all Apples, including bare-root grafted trees, scionwood, and rootstock. Not sure where to start? Check out our Apple Chart! Also see only rootstock and only scionwood.
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Polar Bear
Crabapple - Bare-Root Trees
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‘Budagovsky 118’
Apple Rootstock
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‘Budagovsky 9’
Apple Rootstock
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‘Geneva 11’
Apple Rootstock
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‘M111’
Apple Rootstock
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Malus domestica
Apple Rootstock
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Adams Pearmain
Apple Scionwood
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Airlie Red Flesh
Apple Scionwood
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Ananas Reinette
Apple Scionwood
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Api Etoile
Apple Scionwood
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Ashmead’s Kernel
Apple Scionwood
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Aunt Penelope Winslow
Apple Scionwood
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Baldwin
Apple Scionwood
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Belle de Boskoop
Apple Scionwood
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Ben Davis
Apple Scionwood
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Bethel
Apple Scionwood
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Black Gilliflower
Apple Scionwood
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Black Oxford
Apple Scionwood
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Blenheim Orange
Apple Scionwood
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Blue Pearmain
Apple Scionwood
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Bullock
Apple Scionwood
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Burgundy
Apple Scionwood
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Canadian Strawberry
Apple Scionwood
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Cellar Hole Bitter
Apple Scionwood
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Centennial
Apple Scionwood
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Chenango Strawberry
Apple Scionwood
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Chestnut
Apple Scionwood
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Claygate Pearmain
Apple Scionwood
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Cornish Gilliflower
Apple Scionwood
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Cortland
Apple Scionwood
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Court Pendu Plat
Apple Scionwood
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Cox’s Orange Pippin
Apple Scionwood
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Dabinett
Apple Scionwood
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Duchess of Oldenburg
Apple Scionwood
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Ellis Bitter
Apple Scionwood
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Empire
Apple Scionwood
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Esopus Spitzenburg
Apple Scionwood
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Fameuse
Apple Scionwood
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Fireside
Apple Scionwood
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Freedom
Apple Scionwood
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Frostbite
Apple Scionwood
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Ginger Gold
Apple Scionwood
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Golden Delicious
Apple Scionwood
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Golden Russet
Apple Scionwood
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GoldRush
Apple Scionwood
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Gravenstein
Apple Scionwood
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Gray Pearmain
Apple Scionwood
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Grimes Golden
Apple Scionwood
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Apples

Choosing the Right Apple

Not sure where to start? Check out our Apple Chart!

Choosing a variety: Not every variety may be right for you. All-purpose apples are just that—they’re good for a bunch of jobs. If you're planting just one tree, perhaps start there. However, if you’re a history buff, consider the historical varieties and maybe plant one that originated nearby. If you don’t eat many apples but love pies, go for the pie apples. If you’re a dessert connoisseur, skip all the others and go for the highly flavored dessert varieties. Some are strictly for cider. Some are great to put out at the camp for summer use. Some are perfect for those who want fall fruit but don’t have a root cellar. Others keep all winter and into the following summer.

  • Summer apples ripen in summer, are generally crisp only for a short period, do not store well, and are often best for cooking.
  • Fall apples store longer and are useful for a wide variety of purposes.
  • Winter apples ripen mid to late fall, store well, and reach their best flavor after weeks, or even months, of storage.
  • Dessert apples are delicious eaten raw.
  • Crabapples are less than 2" in diameter. Some crabs bear edible or culinary or cider-making fruit. Some have persistent wildlife fruit that hangs on the tree for weeks or even months. Others have hardly any fruit at all. Some are beautiful ornamentals.
  • Cider apples are especially suited to making fermented “hard” cider. Some cider apples are also good dessert fruit, but most are not.
  • Subacid means tart!
  • Russet or russeting is a skin texture (fairly common on apple varieties and on a few pears and potatoes) which looks and feels somewhat like suede.
  • Bloom is a naturally occurring dust-like yeast film on the skin of some varieties of apples, plums, grapes and blueberries.

Cider Apples

Each year we offer a different assortment of the best European and American cider varieties, including new wild apple introductions from local fruit explorers and cidermakers. Many of these are NOT for fresh eating. They do however possess qualities that make them very desirable for fermented cider production.

Seedling Apples

These trees were grown from seeds, rather than grafted onto rootstock like the other apple varieties we offer. These standard-sized trees will grow to 20–30'.

Flowering and Culinary Crabapples

A crabapple is any apple with fruit smaller than 2" in diameter. All crabs bear edible fruit, some more favorable for culinary use than others. Some fruits are persistent, hanging on the branch through winter and providing forage for robins, jays and waxwings in the early spring. The flowers, tree form and even the shape of the leaves can vary subtly or profoundly. Most are magnificent in bloom and ornamental year round, especially in winter when the leaves drop and the trees show off their interesting forms.


Growing Apples

  • Soil: Adaptable, but prefers well-drained fertile soil.
  • Sun: Full.
  • Pollination: Requires a second variety for pollination. Any apple or crabapple blooming within a quarter mile will probably do.
  • Planting and Pruning: See our planning and planting and pests and diseases pages for more information about soil prep, planting, pruning, and pest control.
  • Spacing:
    • For trees on Malus domestica (standard) and Bud 118 rootstock, 20–25' apart.
    • M111 semi-dwarf, 15–20' apart.
    • G890 semi-dwarf, 10–15' apart.
    • Bud 9 dwarf, 5–10' apart.