25x30' Unknown origin, 18th or early 19th c., likely named by the Hyslop family of Boston, MA.
Single white blossoms. Heavy clusters of 11/2" roundish fruits, brilliant dark red with a dense blue bloom, ripen in later summer or early fall. This culinary crab is one of the best for jelly and pickles. Fine-grained yellow flesh, sometimes with a red tinge just under the skin, is juicy but turns dry, mealy and astringent—just what the cidermaker ordered.
It was already an heirloom by the time Beach described it in 1905 as “one of the best known and most widely cultivated of the crabapples.” As culinary crabs fell out of general favor, Hyslop receded into history. Fortunately some orchards kept them going, like Lakeside Orchard in Manchester, ME, which has a long row of Hyslop trees. Of historic value for us Mainers as the pollen parent of the fine Castle Hill apple Dudley Winter.
Vigorous upright open spreading rounded tree. Susceptible to fireblight. Z3.
(Semi-dwarf: 2½–5' bare-root trees)
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