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Did I receive the right apple tree?

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  • Randommoose
    replied
    My Red Falstaff is on MM106. Weirdly it is lot less vigorous than the Cevaal on M26. But at my previous house I had Red Falstaff on MM106 and that grew more vigorously so I think it is just this particular one not growing as fast or something about the situation (eg a root from another tree underneath is a possibility, that tree was felled this summer so will see if there is an improvement).

    They are both tasty varieties and I like both, just with a slight preference to the Red Falstaff but I couldn't tell you why!

    Leave a comment:


  • ameno
    replied
    MM106 is quite a large rootstock. Unless you have quite poor soil or particularly want a large tree, I would stick with M26.

    Leave a comment:


  • GF3
    replied
    Thanks for your reply.
    Before buying the "Red windsor" I read as much as I could about the various varieties and rootstocks - the pros and cons of each. And I arrived at 2 varieties to choose from - Red Windsor and the other was Red Falstaff. I eventually went with the Red Windsor on M26 (or thought I had!). So now I am deciding if I should relocate the apple I was sent to another part of the garden (the location it currently occupies is a good spot) and replace it with Red Windsor or maybe try the Red Falstaff this time. And I'm thinking of getting it on MM106 ( I have a Lord Lambourne on that rootstock).
    Thanks again.

    Leave a comment:


  • Randommoose
    replied
    I like it - it has a good flavour and is reasonably crisp and juicy to me. My favourite variety is Red Falstaff and I dislike very acid varieties (like Granny Smith) if that helps with knowing my tastes.

    It is healthy, a good grower though not tall (on M26) but stocky and vase shaped with thick trunk branches even on new growth. It doesn't seem too prone to pests - it gets aphids but outgrows them with no help (I squished some in the first year), some apples get pecked by birds or rot (probably from being crammed together - I did thin but need to do that better next year). I planted mine in Jan 2019 as a bareroot feathered one year old and have had fruit every year since. My soil is loam over clay and it was planted into a poor lawn, soil not improved, not fertilised until a couple of doses of seaweed this year and only watered in the first year and subsequently in drought/very hot weather. It has a 1m circle free of grass cut around it and covered in wood chip.

    In summary it is easy to grow, looks good and tastes nice!
    Last edited by Randommoose; 24-09-2021, 11:59 PM.

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  • GF3
    replied
    Thank you for your post.
    Yes, both the Red Windsor and the Cevaal are the "Red Alkmene". And my apple is clearly nothing like them. And both my apples are still securly attached to the tree. If the variety is, as I suspect, Red Delicious - then it will be ready in mid October.

    How do you rate the variety? I am considering buying it again.

    Leave a comment:


  • Randommoose
    replied
    Also one quite distinctive feature of my Cevaal is that the apple stems are really short so the fruit all grow crammed together close to the branch.

    It doesn't look like your apple in shape or colouration.

    Leave a comment:


  • Randommoose
    replied
    I have Cevaal which, from what I read at the time is another name for Red Windsor. Its apples look exactly like the link of the place I got it from (https://walcotnursery.co.uk/product/cevaal/). It is an early variety and finished weeks ago in Gloucestershire. I've attached a picture of the last wrinkly one from the fruit bowl!

    Leave a comment:


  • FB.
    replied
    Originally posted by ameno View Post
    As for Red Delicious, it's a red sport of Golden Delicious, so tastes exactly the same
    They are different varieties, not sports of each other.
    Someone I know has a Golden Delicious in their garden and it produces tasty apples in our climate (mild, dry, sunny climate).
    I've grown a few of the Red Delicious relatives and they're tasty in my climate, too.

    In fact, here apples ripen much earlier than the books say they should and I'm looking into adding a few more varieties which are considered unsuitable for the UK climate.


    Leave a comment:


  • ameno
    replied
    Originally posted by nickdub View Post

    I've not grown Red Delicious myself, so I can't comment directly. I have found that shop bought varieties of Apple can be much less tasty than the same variety grown and ripened properly at home.

    As for refunds, if you don't ask, then you don't get.
    To be honest, with Chris Bowers, I highly doubt you'll get one.
    I had to fight hard for my refund and it was on trees which had only just arrived. And they insisted on them being sent Back (thankfully at their expense), whereas when I've had tree or shrub complaints with other mail order companies they've only asked for photos and then told me to keep or dispose of the tree as I see fit (bare root trees can't be resold, after all, as they will no longer be viable by the time they get back to the seller).

    As for Red Delicious, it's a red sport of Golden Delicious, so tastes exactly the same (which personally I think is pretty mediocre, not to mention hard, which is something I'm not keen on in apples). More importantly, they don't ripen properly in this country. The summers are not warm and long enough.

    Leave a comment:


  • GF3
    replied
    Thanks for all the replies to my post.
    I think I shall wait and see how the other two apples develop over the next few weeks. If it is a Red Delicious then they are ready mid October. It may still be a Red Windsor - as ameno pointed out in his reply - trees can produce oddly shapped apples, and the one that fell off this week may be a premature faller, hence the tough skin, hardness and lack of taste. Could it produce 3 apples and all 3 look nothing like a normal Red Windsor? The tree only cost £20 so I'm not bothered about the money I paid. But it is the fact that I spent hours researching various apple varieties before deciding on the Red Windsor, and waiting two years for it to produce an apple only to find it "may" not be the tree I thought I was buying, it's that I find most annoying. I also bought a Plum Tree from Chris Bowers at the same time - it should be Blue Tit on a pixy rootstock - it hasn't produce any fruit yet !!
    Last edited by GF3; 12-09-2021, 05:53 PM.

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  • nickdub
    replied
    Originally posted by GF3 View Post
    Many thanks for the replies.



    I have checked their web site to see what other red apples they offer. And my best guess is that it is the "Red Delicious" they have sent me. Which is a variety that is not very well regarded by people. I certainly would never have considered buying that variety! It does not have anything going for it in my opinion and in the opinion of many others. There are videoes on Youtube of people ranting on about how bad this apple is (shop bought ones). Apparently there are 42 patented sports of this apple in the USA.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Delicious
    Here is a photo of a Red Delicious and a photo of a Red Windsor. Do you think I have a good enough case to ask them for a replacement?
    I've not grown Red Delicious myself, so I can't comment directly. I have found that shop bought varieties of Apple can be much less tasty than the same variety grown and ripened properly at home.

    As for refunds, if you don't ask, then you don't get.

    Leave a comment:


  • boundtothesoil
    replied
    I agree with others that CB is to be avoided if you really need to receive the variety you ordered. I've bought many wrongly labelled trees over the years, My impression is that errors in variety labelling by both specialist UK nurseries and cheap supermarket trees (mainly Dutch sourced?) are increasing over time. I guess that when selling to the amateur/ home gardener market, suppliers don't care much about dribs and drabs of negative feedback. I wonder what level of quality control on labelling they have out in the field, given it is pretty impossible to discriminate between varieties on the basis of leafless one or two year old grafted/budded trees.

    Leave a comment:


  • GF3
    replied
    Many thanks for the replies.

    Originally posted by nickdub View Post
    As there are few apple varieties with a dark red skin it might be worth a look on the Chris Bowers site to see if they offer any other similar ones. If yours is not Red Windsor, and they sell another dark red variety, then I'd say the chances are that's what you have.
    I have checked their web site to see what other red apples they offer. And my best guess is that it is the "Red Delicious" they have sent me. Which is a variety that is not very well regarded by people. I certainly would never have considered buying that variety! It does not have anything going for it in my opinion and in the opinion of many others. There are videoes on Youtube of people ranting on about how bad this apple is (shop bought ones). Apparently there are 42 patented sports of this apple in the USA.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Delicious
    Here is a photo of a Red Delicious and a photo of a Red Windsor. Do you think I have a good enough case to ask them for a replacement?
    Last edited by GF3; 10-09-2021, 02:42 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • nickdub
    replied
    As there are few apple varieties with a dark red skin it might be worth a look on the Chris Bowers site to see if they offer any other similar ones. If yours is not Red Windsor, and they sell another dark red variety, then I'd say the chances are that's what you have.

    Leave a comment:


  • FB.
    replied
    Originally posted by GF3 View Post
    ..... Chris Bowers. ....
    Originally posted by ameno View Post
    ......less than reliable and trustworthy......... they are simply passing off what they do have as other varieties and rootstocks
    /\ This /\

    I won't buy from Chris Bowers.

    Leave a comment:

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