- Thread starter
- #31
Arielle2
Songster
Road trip!!!!!
Can you imagine an apple the size of a pumpkin? This is an hours drive.
https://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/11135
The Baldwin apple was THE commercial apple here in the Northeast for decades. UNTIL a big freeze. THe McIntosh replaced the dead trees.
BALDWIN APPLE (Malus domestica)
Large red apples with yellow juicy flesh, crisp, sweet and especially flavorful. A vigorous tree, late ripening, a good keeper and productive though somewhat biennial bearing. Very good fresh, for juice, or hard cider. Baldwin Apple was once the most popular variety in New England and in Southwest Washington. Lacks hardiness in real cold winter regions and susceptible to scab. Not a pollinator. Originated in Massachusetts around 1740.
Can you imagine an apple the size of a pumpkin? This is an hours drive.
https://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/11135
The Baldwin apple was THE commercial apple here in the Northeast for decades. UNTIL a big freeze. THe McIntosh replaced the dead trees.
BALDWIN APPLE (Malus domestica)
Large red apples with yellow juicy flesh, crisp, sweet and especially flavorful. A vigorous tree, late ripening, a good keeper and productive though somewhat biennial bearing. Very good fresh, for juice, or hard cider. Baldwin Apple was once the most popular variety in New England and in Southwest Washington. Lacks hardiness in real cold winter regions and susceptible to scab. Not a pollinator. Originated in Massachusetts around 1740.