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Fedco Trees: New Items
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Malus spp.
This is a twig for grafting.
Fall. Highly flavored dessert apple popular in the Victorian era for its complex spicy honey-nut flavor. Compact rugged tree. Z4.
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Malus spp.
This is a twig for grafting.
Late summer-early fall. Old Scottish apple, popular in Victorian times and doing well in the Northeast. Good for baking and fresh eating. Z4.
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Malus spp. Fall. Cox’s Orange Pippin x Jonathan. Bred by Piet de Sonnaville, Wageningen Res Stn, Netherlands, 1949; released commercially in 1971. A
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Malus spp. Hardy seedling rootstock for full-sized “standard” apple trees. Z3.
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Malus spp.
This is a twig for grafting.
Late summer. Beautiful fresh-eating, juicing and cooking apple. Like a summer McIntosh. Z3.
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Malus spp.
This is a twig for grafting.
Fall. Tender mild juicy aromatic fruit for fresh eating and cooking. Productive and annual bearing. Z4.
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Malus spp. Mid-late summer. A fine summer dessert and cider apple. Makes delicious pink sauce. Tree is vigorous, precocious and annual bearing. Z4.
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Malus spp.
This is a twig for grafting.
Winter. Old Hudson Valley apple, late 1700s. Dense and tart off the tree, sweetening in storage. Good keeper. Z4.
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Malus spp. Bittersharp cider apple. Perfect for blending in ciders. Good fresh eating if you like ’em tart! Z4.
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Malus spp. Bitter, sharp and sweet—this collection covers all the bases for making great cider. Z4.
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Malus spp. Start your own heritage apple orchard with a collection of trees traditionally grown in northern New England. Z4.
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Malus spp. 10' tall with entwined limbs. Soft apricot buds open to light pink fragrant very double 2" blossoms. Green-yellow 2" fruit. Z4.
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Malus spp. Rare. Large single white flowers and small red fruits in fall. Extremely rugged tree. Z4.
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Hyslop
Crabapple - Bare-Root Trees
Malus spp. One of the best culinary crabs for jelly, pickles and cider! White blossoms and heavy clusters of brilliant red fruits. Z3.
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Malus spp. Extremely hardy! White blossoms absolutely devour the branches in spring. Abundant rosy-red fruit in clusters. Z3.
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Malus spp. An heirloom culinary crabapple for jellymakers! Z4.
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Prunus armeniaca Mid-late summer. Multipurpose sweet freestone variety is good for fresh eating, canning and drying. Most cold hardy of the Harrow series. Z4.
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Prunus armeniaca Midsummer. Very firm moderately juicy freestone apricot. Late blooming. Z4/5.
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Prunus armeniaca Midsummer. Freestone sweet-tart fruits ripen uniformly, making this one good for processing. Z4.
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Prunus armeniaca Mid-late summer. Pleasantly sweet and firm flesh. Flower buds hardy to –40˚. Z3.
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Astilbe japonica 20-24" tall. Blazing red plums fade to textured caramel brown in fall. Full to part shade. Z3.
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Astilbe chinensis 16-24" tall. Creamy pink-white dense plumes fade to green—not brown—to extend this Astilbe’s time to shine. Full to part shade. Z3.
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Begonia tuberosa 10-12" tall and cascading. Perfect for containers on a shady porch.
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Begonia tuberosa 12-18" with an upright form. A burst of sunshine, in containers or along a shady border.
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Vaccinium corymbosum × angustifolium Three lowbush hybrids to start your Lilliputian blueberry patch. Z4.
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Vaccinium corymbosum Three highbush blueberry cultivars to support cross-pollination and span the ripening season. Z4.
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Aurora
Highbush Blueberry Plants
Vaccinium corymbosum Late. Firm and tasty with a good shelf life. Extended picking season. Z5.
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Vaccinium corymbosum Early-Mid. Excellent post-harvest color retention makes them popular for markets. Sweet and sweetly scently firm berries. Z5.
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Vaccinium corymbosum Early. Firm, mild, sweet berries with good shelf life. Showed strong resistance to mummyberry blight in trials. Z5.
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Vaccinium corymbosum Midseason. Dark berries are petite, sweet and similar to lowbush fruit. Compact size and lovely fall foliage. Z4.
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Vaccinium corymbosum × angustifolium 4" tall. Lowbush-type with small sweet berries. Z3.
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Vaccinium corymbosum × angustifolium 8-10" tall. Lowbush type with small berries and burgundy fall foliage. Z3.
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Vaccinium corymbosum × angustifolium 6" Seeds collected in ME; grown out for selection in Grand Junction, MI. Blue-black berries are bursting with
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Niwot
Black Raspberry Plants
Rubus spp. Early. The first everbearing black raspberry we've offered! First crop in summer and another in fall. Z5.
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Rubus spp. Four black cap cultivars (20 plants total) to feed your obsession. We love these berries! Z5.
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Rubus spp. Four everbearing cultivars (20 plants total) for filling the freezer. These fruit on first-year canes. Z4.
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Rubus spp. Five Rubus cultivars (25 plants total) for a diverse and delicious array of berries—red, yellow, purple and black raspberries, plus blackberries. Z4.
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Rubus spp. Four summer-bearing cultivars (20 plants total) to extend the raspberry-picking season. Z4.
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Caroline
Everbearing Raspberry - Bare-Root Plants
Rubus spp. Midseason. Large red firm flavorful berries with a long harvest window. Z4.
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Rubus spp. Mid-Late. Coral-colored berries turn pink when frozen. Z4.
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Prunus spp. Four cherry trees, one pie and three sweet, for a varietal mix and to support cross-pollination. Z4.
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Feed the birds with 10 native fruiting shrubs, and support the Maine Audubon! Z4.
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Plant a food forest for the future with these eight trees, including hickory, chestnut and persimmon. Z4.
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Put the kettle on! A collection of five nourishing and easy-to-grow perennial herbs. Z3.
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Abies koreana 15-30' x 6 -12' Upright 3" purple-blue cones perch atop bright green boughs on a conical to pyramidal tree. Nice as a specimen or in hedges. Z5.
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Dahlia 44-48" tall. Dinnerplate type. Massive blooms sought after for floral arrangements.
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Dahlia hybrida 42-48" tall. Cactus type with huge 5" blooms in moody hues.
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Dahlia 36-40" tall. Decorative-type in a fruit-salad of yummy hues.
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Hemerocallis 24-30" tall. A flamboyant swashbuckler with midsummer blooms. Z2.
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Hemerocallis 18-28" tall. Double red midseason blooms! Very special. Z3.
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