Propagated from a single parent apple tree which was discovered in 1998 on the remote Bardsey Island, just off the coast of North Wales. This very old fruit tree was found to be a completely unique new variety. Apple ‘Bardsey Island’ is a particularly disease resistant variety, showing no signs of scab or canker.
Good crops of large apples with attractive, pink-striped skins can be harvested from September. The fruits are crisp and sweet with a distinct lemon fragrance. An excellent dessert apple eaten straight from the tree or made into juice. When cooked, it forms a sweet puree that needs no sugar added.
- Apple rootstocks:
- M27 – Extreme dwarf reaching a mature height of up to 1.5m (5′)
- M9/ Pajam 9/ P9 – Dwarf reaching a mature height of up to 2.5m (8′)
- M26 – Dwarf reaching a mature height of 2.5-3m (8-10′)
- M6 – Semi dwarf reaching a mature height of up to 3m (10′)
- MM106 – Semi dwarf reaching a mature height of up to 4m (13′)
This variety is not self-fertile. For the heaviest crops it is best grown with another variety. If you only have room for one tree then make sure that a neighbour has a tree close by that can act as a suitable pollinator. Pollination Group 2 – Cooking and Eating Apple
Estimated time to cropping once planted: 2 years.
Estimated time to best yields: 5 years.
Useful links:
How to grow fruit trees Fruit rootstock guide
Some parts of these flowers are edible. For more details about edible flowers click here.
Plant height and spread is seasonal therefore we list by pot size rather than a defined plant size. The height and spread of the plant delivered will vary depending on the season, meaning arrival images are an indication only.
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