Christmas Pearmain Apple Trees - One of the most famous and sought after of the many 'Pearmains', First recorded in 1893 but very difficult to obtain now. Always known as one of the most excitingly flavoured varieties.
D'estivale Ambassy Apple Trees - An early variety of apple trees for eating from September. The handsome red flushed fruits are borne very abundantly and are crisp, sweet and very juicy with an excellent flavour.
Egremont Russet Apple Trees - Picking late September, stores well. Brown variety with firm yellow/white flesh, Nutty flavour, Still the best russet apple. Pollinators include
Fall Russett Apple Trees - A very old Russet variety thought to have been discovered originally in 1875 in the U.S.A. Fall Russet forms a low spreading tree and although the fruits are small, it yields heavily.
Granny Smith Apple Trees - The popular Australian winter storing variety that keeps well until April. Crops exceptionally well in a warm dry summer. Often used for cooking when grown in this country. Large, green fruits with a crisp, firm flesh.
Idared Apple Trees - For picking in late October and will store well until May. The large fruits are yellow with a red flush and the flesh is white and juicy. The flavour is good.
Irish Peach Apple Trees - This variety is one of the very best for eating straight from the tree, when the flavour is one of the finest of all. Crops well and easy to grow.
Lord Lambourne Apple Trees - A regular and heavy cropper that is ready in October to early November. Medium round fruits, greenish yellow with a bright crimson flush and darker red strips. White crisp, juicy flesh with a sweet taste.
Rev. W. Wilks Apple Trees - September/October picking. The tender white flesh cooks to a golden froth. Superb for dumplings and baking. Quality exhibition fruits. Not a good pollinator for other varieties. Pollinate with
Rivers Early Peach Apple Trees - A very old variety raised by the famous Rivers Nursery in 1893. Similar to Irish Peach but, experts believe, with an even finer flavour, indeed caught at the right time there is a distinct peach-like taste.
Scarlet Pimpernel - A very pretty apple of bright scarlet almost covering the yellow ground. Crisp, juicy and pleasantly sweet though refreshing, this is one of the earliest varieties. Suitable for eating straight from the tree.
St Edmund's Pippin Apple Trees - (Russet)
Vistabella Apple tree - An early variety for eating late July and into August. Their fruits are most attractive and predominantly red, with a crisp and juicy flesh. A strong growing tree; pollinators include Redsleeves, Greensleeves, Irish Peach.
Sunrise Apple Trees - A Canadian bred early variety with some impressive qualities. Sunrise is ready for picking during the second half of August and the fruits are of medium size and three quarters flushed red.
Adams Pearmain Apple Trees - The Adams Pearmain Apple is yellow with dull, crimson red and a dry nutty flavour. Wide spreading tree.
Alkmene Apple Trees - German raised in 1982. Season early-mid, an ideal garden variety that deserves wider appreciation, superb for it's hardiness, flavour and reliable yield. Medium sized bright green-gold stippled raspberry red, base olive green.
Allington Pippin Apple Trees - A Super variety once widely grown for its indescribably rich flavour but suffered a decline in popularity in the'30s. It deserves to be resurrected again now!
Api Apple Trees - A tremendously interesting and valuable variety with a long and prominent history. Originally thought to have been found in Brittany in the early 1600's it was first known in England in 1676.
Arthur Turner Apple Trees - For eating August to October. The large, greenish yellow apple trees fruits excel for baking. A very good cropper that is upright in growth. The spring flowers are especially beautiful.
Bountiful Apple Trees - A new variety from East Malling. Compact fertile trees. The fruits are sweeter than many other culinary varieties. A good pollinator.
Catshead Apple Trees - An extremely old and very interesting variety dating from 1629. The pale green to yellow flat to oblong fruits have been described as 'conveniently box-shaped for parceling into dumplings!
Cornish Gilliflower Apple Trees - Found in a cottage garden near Truro in the 18th C. An attractive Apple decorated in dark red stripes and flushes over a gold base, but the fruits were too uneven to find lasting commercial use.
Cox's Orange Pippin Apple Trees - Usually ready for picking in mid September, and can be stored well into the new year. Generally regarded as the finest flavoured of all English apples.
Discovery Apple Trees - Ready for picking during the second half of August, the fruits are medium sized, greenish yellow, three quarters flushed with bright red. The flesh is creamy white, crisp and juicy.
Downton Pippin Apple Trees - An 'Orange Pippin x Golden Pippin' cross produced this rounded dual purpose variety which found fame in Victorian kitchens as well as being suited to dessert purposes. From £20.80
Elstar Apple Trees - Flushed bright red on a yellow backing, the fruits are crisp and juicy, medium sized, very good flavour and are ready for eating October to January....
Emneth Early (Early Victoria) Apple Trees - Early variety for picking late July and August. Soft, greenish white flesh that cooks well. An excellent variety for its natural earliness. Pollinators include
Empire Apple Trees - Having only quite recently found favour in the shops, it comes as quite a surprise that this variety was first introduced in 1966. Well known for its flavour, sweet and crisp.
Epicure Apple Trees - For eating August and September. Frost resistant. Suitable for growing anywhere and a very easy and trouble free variety. Very good flavour from the medium sized fruits that are very attractively striped red.
Exeter X Apple Trees - This Worcester Pearmain x Beauty of Bath Cross is one parent of the outstanding 'Redsleeves'. A good early variety which begins to ripen in early August and is useful because it matures over quite a long period.
Falstaff Apple Trees - One of the latest new variety from East Malling Institute of Research. Raised from a cross between James Grieve and Golden Delicious. Falstaff is a very high yielding apple.
Fiesta Apple Trees - Fiesta is a new late season apple, raised by the East Malling Research Station. A cross between Coxs Orange Pippin and Idared, this excellent new variety is ready for picking late September/October.
Fortune Apple Trees - For picking and eating September to October, the medium sized, golden yellow fruits are flushed bright red on the sunny side, and the flavour is exceptional. Sweet and aromatic with firm flesh.
George Cave Apple Trees - An early dessert variety for eating early August. Medium sized fruits that have a light red flush over a green backing. Reliable and fairly hardy. A good, refreshing flavour from the crisp fruits.
Golden Delicious Apple Trees - Late variety. Stores well. Not always successful in all parts of the country, as it requires a higher temperature and light intensity. The fruits are far superior and have no resemblance to shop bought fruit.
Golden Pippin Apple Trees - (B) GOLDEN PIPPIN Famous for Pippin jelly, tarts and cider so a useful and versatile addition to the cooks repertoire. A small apple of bright golden yellow which may be poached whole, the flavour is intense.
Greensleeves Apple Trees - A superb variety from east Malling Research Station. It bears fruit very early in life and is a superb pollinator for other mid-season apples. The fruits are ready for picking at the end of September...
Grenadier Apple Trees - Picking throughout August until September, the fruits are medium/large, round and yellowish green. The flesh is white and crisp and cooks very well. The flavour is excellent.
James Grieve Apple Trees - The fruits are ready for picking mid September onwards - and suitable for eating throughout October. The fruits are medium large, round, conical, greenish yellow with an orange and red flush and stripes.
Joybells Apple Trees - An exceptionally attractive apple with a typically 'long' deep shape decorated with carmine stripes over a dusky pink ground. Very juicy tender white flesh with a subtle sweet flavour.
Katy Apple Trees - For picking early September through to October. Very good flavour for an early variety, the flesh is crisp and juicy. Medium sized fruits of yellow-green, coloured with a bright red flush
Kent Apple Trees - Late variety for storing and eating in the new year, keeping well into the spring. A cross from Cox and Jonathan. Malling Kent produces regular and heavy crops of large fruits.
Kidd's Orange Red Apple Trees - An excellent variety for eating November to December. A seedling of Coxs Orange Pippin with a very similar flavour but easier to grow. Resistance to Scab and Mildew and hardier in cold conditions.
Laxton Superb Apple Trees - Late variety. Stores well. Superb flavour. White, firm juicy flesh that is aromatic. Superb variety but can crop heavily only every other year on occasion.
Nutmeg Pippin Apple Trees - A small but beautifully marked golden Apple with an intricate network of bronze russeting. Ready for picking in early October, they will store at least until January
Pitmaston Pineapple Apple Trees - Raised in 1785, an upright moderately vigorous tree which crops very heavily. Although sometimes biennial. A variety for the connoisseur with very unusual flavour - at times distinctly pineapple-like.
Princesse *new* Apple Trees - A russett variety with large show quality fruits, lovely rounded pale golden brown fruits. Rich, distinctive, nutty flavour and a very reliable, heavy cropper.
Queen Cox Apple Trees - A selected strain of COX'S ORANGE PIPPIN that gives improved colour of fruits, high quality and heavier crop.
Rajka Apple Trees - A variety from the Czeck republic that arrives with some high commendations, not least it's hardiness and disease resistance. A very heavy and regular crop of small to medium sized yellow fruits.
Red Devil Apple Trees - A new dessert variety raised by a fruit enthusiast by crossing Discovery and Kent. Red Devil has been trialled at the National Fruit Trials and has proved to be a heavy and precocious cropper.
Red Falstaff Apple Trees - A sport of the highly regarded and already very popular Falstaff, but with a bright ruby red skin colouring This variety has fine eating qualities with a sweet but refreshing flavour.
Red James Grieve Apple Trees - A sport of this hugely popular variety with an almost entirely red skin finish but identical in all other ways. An outstandingly beautiful Apple
Red Windsor Apple Trees - A mid season variety of very fine flavour. Red Windsor is firmly textured and has a richly aromatic but sweet and honeyed flavour.
Rosemary Russett Apple Trees - For eating November onwards, and stores late. Not a heavy crop, but very richly flavoured. Lightly russetted fruit of medium size, an old variety that is exceptional for flavour among the late keeping varieties.
Scotch Bridget Apple Trees - (B) SCOTCH BRIDGET Very hardy variety first known in 1851. The rich creamy flesh has an excellent texture and a sweet flavour which needs no sugar, maintaining good quality until Christmas. Excellent stewed or baked.
Scrumptious Apple Trees - NEW An English garden apple bred for England. This highly coloured bright scarlet apple is deceptive for it hides a unique and highly complex flavour.
St Cecilia Apple Trees - A Seedling directly from Coxs Orange and famous for having inherited some of that varieties enticing rich flavour. A medium sized green yellow apple, partly covered by a crimson flush and stripes smooth skinned.
Sunset Apple Trees - Superb, aromatic flavour from the medium sized, crisp and juicy fruits. The fruits are golden yellow with a red flush and some russet. The crops are heavy and regular.
White Melrose Apple Trees - An old Scottish variety. The very unusual large, very pale whitish yellow fruits have a rich sweet- sharp flavour and keep some of their shape when cooked. It is a heavy cropping, moderately vigorous tree.
William Crump Apple Trees - This late season dessert variety is a Cox/Worcester cross. The fruits are brightly flushed and striped orange-red over a greenish background and have an extremely rich, aromatic flavour.
Yellow Ingestrey Apple Trees - A variety notable for its beautiful drooping habit which has made it sought after for lawn and specimen planting. A small bright greenish yellow, golden flushed apple which ripens in September.
Annie Elizabeth Apple Trees - For eating December to June. An excellent late keeping variety with a dry textured fruit that cooks well.
Braeburn Apple Trees - Introduced by popular request as it is now a prevalent and popular supermarket apple of fine, refreshing flavour.
Charles Ross Apple Trees - Ready for picking in October. The very large, round, shiny red fruit is evenly shaped and has a very polished appearance. The flavour is superb, with a very juicy crisp flesh.
Crimson Queening Apple Trees - A suitably handsome and regally coloured Apple for such a name, the fruits are heavily flushed dark ruby red. By contrast the flesh is very pale and creamy with a delicate, perfumed floral flavour.
Gala Apple Trees - Golden yellow fruits that are flushed scarlet and are ready for eating from late October to January The fruits have a creamy white, lightly aromatic flesh that is sweet and very juicy.
Gala Must Apple Trees - A recent introduction with very heavy yields of attractive fruits which have a lovely scarlet skin colouring. The fruits are of similar quality and flavour to Gala. For eating October to January.
Gavin Apple Trees - Raised in 1956, so not especially old but a variety never fully appreciated and deserving wider cultivation, the fine, bright coloured fruits are ready for picking mid October and for use right through December.
Gloster 69 Apple tree - A relatively recent introduction from Europe that is ready for picking in November and stores very well, until the new year and often Springtime. A reliable heavy cropper that yields well.
Golden Noble Apple Trees - For eating October/December. Golden Noble was discovered in 1820. A first class, creamy white flesh that is sweet and juicy.
Howgate Wonder Apple Trees - For picking early November and stores well into the new year. Often produces blossom late, so is very suitable for frosty areas and the north.
Lemon Pippin Apple Trees - An interesting and rather valuable old variety first mentioned as long ago as 1744. This dual purpose variety has the shape colour and, at times, smell of a lemon.
Lord Derby Apple Trees - A very old Worcestershire variety which found fame on the show bench back in the late 1800's, not surprisingly the rich crimson flushed colouring is still remarked upon today.
Margaret Apple Trees - Valuable because of its very early season, and so named because it ripens around St Margarets day, 22nd July. Also known as Red Joaneting, this is a pretty, highly coloured apple.
Monarch Apple Trees - Extremely frost resistant blossom. The Monarch Apple Trees fruits are olive green, flushed pink and are ready for eating November and store until spring.
Peasgood Nonsuch Apple Trees - A useful garden and exhibition variety. Very good flavour, slightly acid, but still sweet. Very large fruits. Golden with flushed red stripes. Strong aroma. Superb for baking. Season late September to December.
Pixie Apple Trees - Picking in October for eating December to March. A delicious flavour with crisp, sweet, juicy fruits. Medium sized, greenish yellow flushed with orange-red. Prolific cropping with good disease resistance.
Red Delicious Apple Trees - For eating early December onwards the fruits will keep late into the spring. Soft flesh. Pollinators include
Robin Pippin Apple Trees - This worcester type Apple arose in Kent in the 1950's and has the dual qualities of a magnificent regal red skin colouring coupled with a distinct Strawberry - like flavour
Self Fertile Cox Apple Trees - A Cox clone which is a better grower and more reliable cropper. For those who insist on Cox as part of their planting programme this is a better choice than the standard Cox.
Summer Red Apple Trees - Large, dark red fruits with a pleasant flavour and refreshing. Raised at Summerland Research Station, British Columbia. Good quality fruits for eating late September to November.
The Queen Apple Trees - Essex in 1858 and once a popular garden apple, rather hard to find these days. A large, very pale yellow fruit partly covered with crimson flushes and stripes.
Tydeman's Late Orange Apple Trees - Late autumn variety, flavour and texture very similar to Cox. Fruits will store late and are easy to grow. The fruits are medium sized, golden yellow with a bright orange-red flush.
Wellington Apple Trees - The most popular cooker of Victorian times and much sought after today. A medium large pale greenish to yellow-white apple with occasional variably coloured flushes and stripes.
American Mother Apple Trees - For eating October to December. A very distinctive and aromatic, creamy white flesh that is sweet and very juicy The fruits are golden and flushed deep red
Ashmeads Kernel Apple Trees - Firm, crisp yellow flesh with a sweet flavour that is very aromatic. Green-yellow fruits with a brown flush that are ready for eating from December to March.
Chivers Delight Apple Trees - A good cropping variety that also grows well in the north. Golden yellow fruits, mottled with red. Medium size, sweet. A very good flavour at times, but not consistent....
Court Pendu Plat Apple Trees - A much valued old variety which was first described in 1613. The fruits are seldom ready for eating before Christmas but will then keep until April.
King Of The Pippins Apple Trees - A storing variety for eating December to March. Firm flesh with a very rich and aromatic flavour. Fruits green/yellow flushed with red stripes. A vigorous, spreading tree.
Newton Wonder Apple Trees - For use from November to March. The fruits have exceptional flavour when cooked and can also be eaten for dessert.
Winston Apple Trees - A good flavoured apple for storing and eating January to March. Vigorous growth and heavy cropper with resistance to Scab. Similar appearance to Laxton Superb with a far better colour
Belle De Boscoop Apple Trees - A large, crisp, juicy apple of the Blenheim type, that has good Scab resistance. Makes a large wide tree. Very heavy cropping. A dual purpose variety often used for cooking.
Blenheim Orange Apple Trees - An excellent variety for dessert and cooking. A real dual purpose variety with exceptional flavour. Crisp, yellow flesh, with a fine sub-acid flavour.
Bramley Seedling Trees - The most popular culinary variety for late autumn picking, and will store until late February with ease.
Crispin Apple Trees - The fruit is large, oblong, bright green, changing to golden yellow, with an occasional orange/brown flush The flesh is white, firm, juicy and the flavour is very, very pleasant. Ideal for eating fresh from the tree.
Holstein Apple Trees - A delicious apple very like a Cox. Highly aromatic. Very vigorous. Excels on M27. Pollinators include
Jonagold Apple Trees - For eating October onwards and stores late. A regular cropper, the very large, golden fruits have a superb flavour. Very popular for the heavy crops of juicy, crisp fruits that are so richly flavoured. Jonagold...
Jupiter Apple Trees - The excellent variety raised by East Malling Research Station. The fruits are medium to large with a superb flavour that is similar to Cox. Crisp, juicy flesh that is covered by a very attractive skin...
Red Prince Apple Trees - A Jonagold clone with impressive large attractive fruits which are almost entirely covered with a uniform red. This variety can be very heavy yielding, to maintain the potential fruit size some thinning may be necessary.
Ribston Pippin Apple Trees - For eating November to January, a regular and heavy cropper with moderate growth, the blossom is fairly frost tolerant. Medium sized, yellow fruits with a dull red flush.
Sturmer Pippin Apple Trees - For eating from January to April, A compact tree that crops well. The large, rounded fruits are pale primrose yellow with a slightly rosy flush and should be left on the tree as long as possible.
Suntan Apple Trees - An excellent variety from East Malling Research Station. The fruits are ready for picking October and will store until the end of February and longer. High marks for flavour.
Warners King Apple Trees - Known since the 1700's no less. A large pale green conical to round apple which turns pale yellow towards the end of its season.
Rubinette Apple Trees - A new variety, Rubinette is an outstanding new variety from Switzerland. Ready for eating from late September and stores well until the new year. Medium sized fruits, flushed and striped bright red on yellow.
Spartan Apple Trees - Ready for picking early October and will keep into the new year. The fruits are medium sized and a dark mahogany red. The skin is very smooth with an excellent bloom.
Merton Knave Apple Trees - For picking and eating late August and September. The medium sized fruits are flushed red overall, crisp, sweet and rich. The blossom is fairly frost tolerant. Suitable for planting everywhere
Tydeman's Early Apple Trees - The medium sized fruits are yellow-green with a red flush, firm and juicy. A good cropper. For picking and eating August and early September. Suitable for planting everywhere and easy to grow.
Golden Sphere Cherry Plum Trees - Particularly large, rather apricot-like beautiful golden fruits, a little sweeter too.
Gypsy Cherry Plum Trees - Cherry red fruits of even quality and vibrant flavour.
Black Heart Cherry Tree - An interesting older variety that can produce impressive results under good conditions. Few other varieties can approach it for the size and beauty of it's gleaming dark ebony red fruits which have a sumptuous flavour.
Black Oliver Cherry Trees - A medium to large rounded cherry with a sumptuous deep black colour and outstanding rich, sweet flavour. Raised in the West Midlands, this forms a vigorous upright, then spreading tree. Pollinate with Stella, Van etc.
Bradbourne Black Cherry Trees - A rich, dark crimson cherry with large fruits that have a very flavourful, dark red, juicy flesh. Ripening late July. Pollinate with
Celeste Cherry Trees - A further new naturally compact variety with large dark red fruits of good quality which ripen Mid July. Self-fertile.
Early Rivers Cherry Trees - Very early large, black fruits from mid-June onwards. A heavy, reliable cropper with very high-quality fruits. Vigorous. Pollinate with
Emperor Francis Cherry Trees - A very good, large, mahogany cherry when ripe, white at first. Beautiful flavour but the fruits have a tendency to crack in wet areas. Good. compact growth. Pollinate with
Florence Cherry Trees - Ready for picking in late July, the large, pale yellow fruits are flushed with crimson. Firm, but juicy fruits, with a very good flavour. Pollinate with
Frogmore Early Cherry Trees - A very generous cropping, yellow cherry. Excellent flavour and very reliable. Pollinate with
Gaucher Bigarreau Cherry Trees - For picking mid to late July. A cropper with vigorous, upright growth. Large, black fruits with a sweet flavour and very high quality. Pollinate with
Govenor Wood Cherry Trees - Dark red fruits with a yellow flush. Good, juicy flavour, a very heavy cropper that ripens in early July with large, round fruits. Pollinate with
Inga Cherry Trees - Like the other new varieties. Inga has black fruits, produced in mid season. The crop is very heavy. Large, black fruits that are very attractive. Very high resistance to all canker.
Lapins (Cherokee) Cherry Trees - Another dark red/black, self-fertile cherry with large, dark fleshed fruits. Good split resistance. A heavy crop produced later in the season.
Merchant Cherry Trees - Early mid season variety with very large, black fruits. Very heavy cropping. Pollinators include
Mermat Cherry Trees - An excellent early black cherry that is heavy cropping, with larger fruits than the popular Early Rivers. The quality is superb and the flavour rather special. Resistance to canker. Pollinate with
Merton Bigarreau Cherry Trees - A black cherry of superb quality for picking mid to late July. Another excellent variety from the John Innes Institute. The fruits are large, purple/black with firm. juicy, red flesh. superb flavour.
Merton Favourite Cherry Trees - Ripening late July with very dark crimson, heart-shaped fruits with a very rich, sweet flavour. A very heavy cropper, strong growing but compact tree. Pollinate with
Merton Glory Cherry Trees - An early variety for picking late June and July. One of the largest cherries of all, yellow spread with crimson. This variety does not crack easily in wet weather. Ideal pollinators are
Merton Heart Cherry Trees - Picking late June and July. Very dark red, very flavourful fruits. Pollinate with Governor Wood.
Merton Premier Cherry Trees - A juicy, firm, red fruit with a good, sweet flavour. Picking June/early July. Pollinate with
Morello Cherry Trees - A superb variety for growing against a north or east facing wall. The fruits are large and juicy with a bittersweet flavour when ripe.
Nabella Cherry Trees - A superb new variety introduced from Germany, where the results are exceptional. The medium sized, juicy black fruits are ideal for all culinary purposes. Very heavy yielding and good, compact growth. Excellent flavour. Self fertile.
Napoleon Bigarreau Cherry Trees - Ripening late July, the pale yellow fruits have a dark red background. A very sweet and juicy flavour and an excellent cropper. Pollinate with
Nutberry Black Cherry Trees - Medium sized, black fruits with a juicy, dark red flesh. An old variety with compact, moderate growth. Pollinate with
Penny Cherry Tree - A superb recent introduction with giant heart shaped black fruits which ripen late, in late August.
Regina Cherry Trees - An extremely useful introduction from Germany, Regina is a very hardy and strong growing tree which does well in all areas. The very large black fruits are full of flavour and ripen late.
Roundel Cherry Trees - Early July, very good flavour and high quality, very large, dark red, shiny fruits. Soft, sweet flesh and a good reliable cropper. Pollinate with
Sasha Cherry Trees - Large, black fruits produced late mid season. Very heavy crops of high quality fruits. Very good flavour. Pollinate with
Skeena Cherry tree - Skeena is a new self-fertile cherry from Canada. The fruits are quite large and very sweet and keep well on the tree in good condition without splitting.
Stella Cherry Trees - A superb variety, raised in British Columbia that is self-fertile. The fruits are large, dark red and ripen for picking in late July. The fruits are of very good quality, and have an excellent flavour.
Summer Sun Cherry Trees - A new very large fruited late Cherry raised by John Innes, Summer Sunshine represents a distinct improvement over other varieties of this Class. The large dark red-black fruits have a delicious sweet flavour.
Summit Cherry Trees - Very high quality, dark red fruits, with a delicious flavour. Very heavy cropping in late July to extend the season. Makes a good, easy to manage tree. Summit requires pollination Stella and Merchant would be suitable.
Sylvia Cherry Trees - A new dessert Cherry of compact growth habit, the sweet black fruits of fine quality and flavour. A good variety in its own right.
Van Cherry Trees - For picking late July, the large bright red, shiny fruits are firm and juicy, with a sweet, dark flesh. The flavour is excellent. The trees are vigorous, upright when young and spreading in later years.
Vega Cherry Trees - A new introduction from Canada. For those of you who prefer a white cherry this variety is a must. High quality fruits that are sweet and juicy. A mid season variety.
Golden Glow * New * Apricot Trees - The succulent orange fleshed fruits are ripe in early August. Very hardy!
Gold Cott Apricot Trees - Introduced from the USA and highly recommended as a robust, hardy and reliable cultivar suited to a cold wet climate such as ours! Beautiful golden yellow fruits, medium to large in size.
Large Early Apricot Trees - Large, oval fruits that are orange/ yellow and red, with a very fine delicious flavour. Hardy and ripens early August.
Royal Orange Apricot Trees - Oval yellow fruits that are finely spotted with purple. Ripens early August, excellent crop and flavour.
Tomcot Apricot Trees - A very distinguished New Apricot from France with extremely large fruits, quite the largest Apricots you will have seen, they can attain the size of a small Peach! These are blessed with a uniquely intense flavour.
Anna Spath Plum tree - A late dessert Plum for eating into October that has an excellent flavour. Red-purple fruits with a slight blue flush produced on an upright tree, a very heavy cropper.
Avalon Plum Trees - A large dessert plum that ripens late August usually about a week to 10 days earlier than the popular Victoria. The fruits are round oval with a red skin and light bloom.
Avon Cross Plum Tree - An interesting and valuable old cultivar raised in Bristol around 1921. The large oval plum fruits are light purple over green-gold and are ideal for dessert or cooking. They have a rich, greengage like flavour.
Belle De Louvain Plum Trees - A cooking variety, with large scarlet-red fruits that become almost purple when ripe in August. Vigorous, upright growth, and very heavy cropping. Self fertile, so no pollinators are needed. A very richly flavoured variety
Black Prince Plum trees - An old English plum tree variety that was raised in Bedfordshire in 1923. The medium to large deep dusky violet-purple fruits ripen almost to black and have a succulent yellow-green flesh.
Blue de Belgique Plum tree - A hardy and productive tree with good quality deep blue/purple fruits, ripening mid August. Pleasant, sweet dessert flavour that may also be used for all culinary purposes. Juicy yellow flesh.
Blue Tit Plum Trees - An early variety with the blue-black yellow fleshed fruits of fine dessert quality which are ready to eat from mid August. Heavy cropping, reliable and self fertile so will crop well on its own.
Coe's Golden Drop Plum Trees - Yellow fruits with red dots on the sunny side. This variety insists on a sheltered position and excels against a wall. A very worthwhile variety with delicious, slightly apricot flavoured fruits
Coopers Large Plum Trees - An unusual American raised variety with handsome large purple red oval fruits for use early-mid September. Flesh juicy, yellow, good for dessert.
Curlew Plum Trees - Strikingly beautiful medium-to large briliant violet purple circular fruits which ripen mid to late August.
Czar Plum Trees - August picking. the medium sized fruits are dark purple and oval. The flesh is yellow/green, very juicy with a good acid flavour. A reliable popular cooking plum that is prolific and hardy.
Early Laxton Plum Trees - The earliest plum to ripen. Pleasant dessert flavour and also suitable for cooking. Compact tree. Yellow/red fruits. Pollinate with
Edna * New * Plum Trees - A Norwegian variety raised by crossing Czar x Peche. An early variety ready in late July, this is a little known but most promising variety The large oval deep blueblack fruits are of excellent quality.
Excaliber Plum Trees - Very Large dessert plum of exceptional quality Ripening late August-early September, the round oval fruits have a red-yellow skin with a light bloom. Flavour is good with a crisp juicy texture .
Giant Prune (Burbanks) Plum Trees - For picking early September. A cooking variety that is red with a purple flesh. Very hardy and heavy cropping, with frost resistance and healthy growth. Often eaten fresh. Self fertile.
Groves Late Victoria Plum Trees - Similar to the popular variety Victoria but cropping rather later in late September and October. Excellent flavour and a very worthwhile variety. No pollinator required.
Herman Plum Trees - A very early plum that is usually ready for picking in late July. The fruits are medium sized, blue-black and free from the stone with ease. The quality is outstanding!
Jefferson's Gage Plum Trees - The fruits are round, yellowy green, with bronze markings. A gage flavoured plum, with excellent flavour. A moderate, upright growth that is ready for picking in late September. Pollinate with
Kirkes Blue Plum Trees - For picking in mid September, the fruits are a beautiful dark purple with a violet bloom, the flesh is juicy with superb flavour.
Mallard Plum Trees - A bright red oval plum with a white bloom, of very fine dessert quality and good sweet flavour; the grade also is even and large.
Marjorie's Seedling Plum Trees - For picking late September and into October. The fruits are large, oval and purple blue/black with a yellow, rich, juicy flesh. The fruits hang on the tree well and when fully ripe, are of excellent taste.
Methley Plum trees - Widely regarded as one of the better and more reliable of the Japanese Plums for the UK climate, this small and delicious little brilliant red Plum has a striking red flesh and juice.
Monarch Plum Trees - A popular old variety which continues to be sought by those who know it.An oval dark purple plum which ripens from mid September.
Opal Plum Trees - A recent introduction that produces early, very high quality plums for dessert, Ready for picking in July, the fruits are red-purple with a fine, juicy flesh and a flavour that is very outstanding.
Pershore Yellow Plum Trees - Picking in Mid August, the medium sized oval fruits are golden yellow, with a yellow flesh and moderate flavour. Makes a wonderful jam and cooks and stews very well. A very easy plum to grow.
Purple Pershore Plum Trees - Ripening mid to late August, the bluepurple fruits excel for all culinary purposes. The purple fruited selection of Pershore Yellow Egg with all the same excellent cooking qualities. Very easy and heavy cropping.
Reeves Seedling Plum Trees - This variety is often a year or two later before providing a full crop. The flavour, however, is really superb, almost a peach in plum's clothing. The fruits are very large, round and round.
Rivers' Early Prolific Plum Trees - The purple/blue fruits are ready for picking late July and into August. Good flavour, with a juicy golden flesh that is excellent for all culinary purposes. A compact tree. Pollinate with
Sanctus Hurbertus Plum Trees - A new variety from Belgium with larger fruits than the established early variety Early Rivers. The crop is far heavier and the flavour is good. Purple/blue fruits, with a heavy bloom.
Severn Cross Plum Trees - For picking late September, an outstanding, regular and heavy cropping variety. The yellow fruits are juicy and large with a very good dessert flavour. An excellent late season variety. Self fertile.
Swan Plum Trees - A very old Thomas Rivers introduction from 1897! The round to oval reddish purple fruits ripen mid August and have a good dessert flavour, may also be used for all culinary purposes.
Thames Cross Plum trees - The beautiful soft apricot yellow oval fruits can be enjoyed fresh from early September and are also ideal for jams, pies and bottling. Sweet, mild and juicy flavour.
The President Plum Trees - A handsome large oval plum of dark purpleblue, the yellow flesh of very fine desert flavour and also well suited to all culinary purposes. Not a heavy cropper but of very fine quality and flavour.
Valour Plum Trees - A good late season variety of plum trees with oval reddish-purple attractive fruits; inside the flesh is firm and golden yellow. Good semi-sweet flavour, suits dual purpose. Hardy & a good reliable cropper. Self fertile.
Verity Plum Trees - A useful, fairly spreading tree amply clothed with branches. The medium sized blue fruits have a slight bloom & a very good sweet flavour.
Victoria Plum Trees - A most famous variety, loved by all. For picking late August until early September,...
Warwickshire Drooper Plum Trees - As the name suggests, a variety with a drooping habit. Very large, yellow plums in mid-late September. A dual purpose plum that is superb for all culinary purposes and can also be eaten for dessert.
Vicar of Winkfield Pear Trees - Culinary. Pale green fruits ripening to soft chartreuse yellow, large, blocky and quite weighty. Must be left on the tree as long as possible, will continue to ripen in store.
Louise Bonne De Jersey Pear Trees - For picking early October, the large dessert fruits are yellow/green with pronounced red f lush. The delicious flesh is sweet and melting. A regular copper with strong, upright growth.
Packhams Triumph Pear Trees - For harvesting mid October and eating November and December. A most beautiful clear yellow pear, ripening with an orange flush. Outstanding for flavour, the sweet, juicy, tender flesh simply melts away.
Beurre Hardy Pear Trees - Season mid to late October. Pick when the fruits are hard and ripen in store. Medium to large fruits that have a good, sweet flavour. The flesh is white and juicy.
Conference Pear Trees - For picking mid October and eating until late November but, with good storage, this variety will keep much longer. The medium sized fruits are long, dark green, changing to yellow-green with a brown russet.
Durondeau Pear Trees - For eating October and November. The fruits are golden yellow with a red-brown russet. A popular eating variety and a very good flavour. Very fertile and ideal compact growth for the smallest garden.
Fondant Dautomne Pear Trees - A small spreading tree with beautiful red Autumn leaves and moderately sized smooth skinned olive green Pears Maturing from late September, they have a much coveted perfumed soft tender and juicy flesh.
Invincible Pear Trees - Invincible by name and nature, a pear which will never let you down! You have never known a pear like it!
Josepene De Malines Pear Trees - For picking and storing to eat in December and January. A very reliable cropper that normally makes a smaller tree, with its weak to moderate, rather weeping habit.
Beth Pear Trees - A very exceptional variety from East Malling Research Station. An early dessert eating variety with excellent texture and the most beautiful flavour. Medium size fruits for picking September through to October.
Bristol Cross Pear Trees - For eating late September and October. White, sweet flesh with a good flavour. A good crop from a tree with moderate, upright growth. Not a good pollinator for other varieties.
Clapps Favourite Pear Trees - A very fertile and hardy variety with handsome yellow fruits that are flushed scarlet. Good upright growth. Picked and eaten in September. Pollinators include
Concorde Pear Trees - A new variety, raised by the Institute of Horticultural Research, East Malling. Concorde is a superb, very heavy cropping variety, with a flavour to match the quality of the fruits.
Doyenne Du Comice Pear Trees - For picking and eating in late October/November and keeping into December or longer if stored, but this pear is so delicious there are unlikely to be any left for storing.
Dr Jules Guyot Pear Trees - A very early variety, that is ready for picking just after mid August for eating from late August onwards. An easy to grow variety with compact, upright growth, producing yellow fruits with a slight flush.
Glou Morceau Pear Trees - For picking late October and storing for eating in December/January. A medium sized fruit that is green and turns to yellow when ripe in store. Very fertile and very reliable. An excellent flavourful storing variety.
Gorham Pear Trees - Again selected for the exciting flavour. A popular sweet, musky flavour from the white and tender, melting flesh. Small to medium sized fruits that are pale yellow with a light russet. Good, upright growth.
Moonglow Pear Trees - A new addition to our lists, Moonglow is a very attractive pear with a bright lemon-yellow skin. Ready for picking in August and use through September.
Nouveau Poitou Pear Trees - A relatively recent introduction which may be enjoyed throughout November from storage and sometimes longer. Although a fairly compact tree it is heavy cropping, producing large chartreuse fruits partly covered by beautiful golden russet.
Sensation Pear Trees - A pear which has an almost entirely red skin finish which is extremely attractive. Derived from Williams, it has the same, very sweet and juicy flavour, in fact perhaps even better!
Williams Bon Chretien Pear Trees - The most universally grown pear. Ready for picking from September. The medium sized fruit is bright yellow with patches of russet and occasional red streaks on the sun exposed side.
Winter Nellis Pear Trees - The fruit should be harvested in late October or early November and stored for eating November, December and January. First class fruits have been enjoyed even as late as March
Catillac Pear Trees - A culinary pear that is picked in October for using from February to April. Large fruits with a hard flesh that cooks to perfection. Very heavy cropping, with, sturdy, vigorous growth. Beautiful in flower.
Merton Pride Pear Trees - Selected for the perfect flavour. The conical fruits are medium to large and pale green with a brown russet. They are ready for picking mid to late September.
Pitmaston Duchess Pear Trees - For picking at the end of September and eating throughout October and November. Strong, upright growth and a regular heavy crop. A large pear that is pale yellow with a slight russet at the stem.
Admiral Gervais Pear Trees - A beautiful old heirloom French Pear [released 1935 The fruits ripen to a pale yellow and have a superbly flavoured white flesh, the taste is honeyed, sweet and aromatic. Season late Sept-October.
Precoce de Trevoux Pear Tree - One of the most beautiful flavour sensations that can be enjoyed from a Pear, the succulent tender flesh of this variety has a divine, sweetly honeyed and buttery perfumed flesh.
Amire Joanet Pear Trees - Amire Joannet also known variously as. Early Sugar, Sugar Pear, Harvest Pear, St. Jean, Joanette, St. John's Pear, (Archduc d'ete?), This fruit, better known here, as the Early Sugar pear.
Aurora Pear Trees - A 1964 raised American variety with some enviable qualities; it is odd that 'Aurora' has not become better known. The fruit is very large, evenly and classically Pear shaped, and a clean shiny lemon yellow skin.