Arielle2
Songster
Very interesting information, Arielle. No, I haven't looked into the trees you mentioned. All but two of our newer apple trees came from Starke Bro. Nursery down in southern Missouri. I know they use a quince for their pear trees because we had two Asian trees snap off at the ground and what came up from the roots as far as we can tell is quince...plus, that is what they told me they used on the Asian pears.
I'm less than thrilled with their stock as when I talked to them, I told them we wanted fruit that would be hardy in our growing zone and resistant to disease....2/3rds is neither. The Asian pears and some of the apples have succumbed to Fire Blight. The 75 thornless blackberry plants that we bought from them are not cold hardy as promised. We lost 90% of them this past winter. They were 5 years old.
Last year we planted two Candy Crisps? I'd have to look at the tags again that we bought from a local Amish Nursery that so far have been thriving.
We managed to get our 'leaning tree' mostly upright and restaked. What you said about them makes sense. This tree, an Arkansas Black, bore heavily this year and it's crop literally pulled it over.
Unfortunately, you have to do your own homework.... Stark is a sell sell sell store. Try googling and looking for the STATE UNIVERSITY information as they are tasked with accessing, testing, and often developing varieties suitable for their own state. Then that info is supposed to get to local extension offices.
Sources that I think are reputable are ACN nursery, and CUmmins..... one is a wholesaler that puts a few aside for us little people, and the second is run by the children of dr cummins who worked for cornell developing the Geneva line of apple root stock that are resistant to a number of pome fruit pests and diseases so that they now sell fruit trees on these stocks and you order which variety you want on a rootstock that you need.... also they have plums, peaches, etc.... the rootstock is listed for every item.
I no longer buy from a local nursery, at least in my area there are none that I have found useful.
Quince is very useful for making jams-- the jelling agent.
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Mulberries are very easy to grow, and will grow very big if not kept in check. SOme 30-50 feet tall. I was gifted d3 by a member on BYC a number of years ago and they are already 8 feet tall. Then found others that were donated by wild birds...... a fairly pest resistant fruit tree.
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