Semi-dwarf rootstock Out of stock How to grow Triumph appears to have resistance to fire blight and scab, but some susceptibility to cedar apple rust. It is a good choice for organic growers. As you would expect from a variety from Minnesota, it is reliably cold-hardy to zone 4. ...
“ I had to come down to Langley – in those days that took a long time – and get some rootstocks from the Traas family. They came out from Holland in the 1950s and started growing rootstock on 240th Street. Nobody was doing that here at the time. They grew the rootstocks and shi...
PLEASE NOTE: We are not able to maintain an inventory of trees for sale representing our entire apple collection (presentlty 73 varieties). Instead, we offer custom-propagated benchgrafts for these varieties...Availability may vary from year to year. Quantities - and rootstock options - are nec...
Interscience, Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche, France) with 20 ml sterile NaCl (0.85%) solution for 3 min. For isolation of apple-associated bacteria and further resistance screening (described below), 1 ml of the suspension was withdrawn. 4 ml of apple ...
Apple trees are generally small trees, and a given variety can begraftedonto dwarfing or semi-dwarfing rootstocks for smaller and less vigorous plants. If left untrimmed, a tree grown with standard (seedling) rootstock will often reach a height of 9 metres (30 feet) with an equally large cro...
Cultivars were grafted on the M 26 rootstock and planted in the period 1995–2000. Planting distance was 3 × 5 m with an East–West row orientation and trained as spindle trees. Orchard floor management consisted of grass in the interrow and a 1 m-wide herbicide strip in the intrarow ...