Fruit and Nut trees
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Fruit and Nut trees
I think I may have asked this before so apologies if I have. I have planted apple, pear, plum and cherry trees and they are all taking nicely now. I want to plant some more, that will be productive in the North UK climate. Can anybody suggest what other edible fruit/nut trees I should put in to my little mini-orchard? Thanks.
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Re: Fruit and Nut trees
I would speak to nurseries close by you; they should know what will do well, and they should have the varieties most suited to the locality,snow hope wrote:I think I may have asked this before so apologies if I have. I have planted apple, pear, plum and cherry trees and they are all taking nicely now. I want to plant some more, that will be productive in the North UK climate. Can anybody suggest what other edible fruit/nut trees I should put in to my little mini-orchard? Thanks.
Peter.
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Try this place...
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/BEECHWOOD-NURSERIES
He is N.Ireland based (near Greyabbey) and I got some nut trees from him.
I realised after bidding on an ebay auction that he was local and so drove over and collected my purchase (and bought a few more trees too).
I got bareroot hazel nuts and sweet chestnuts.
There are probably other places too, but these trees have now taken well. Although it might be worth waiting until the autumn now.....
[edit - his shop has a reduced selection now - I bought in Feb]
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/BEECHWOOD-NURSERIES
He is N.Ireland based (near Greyabbey) and I got some nut trees from him.
I realised after bidding on an ebay auction that he was local and so drove over and collected my purchase (and bought a few more trees too).
I got bareroot hazel nuts and sweet chestnuts.
There are probably other places too, but these trees have now taken well. Although it might be worth waiting until the autumn now.....
[edit - his shop has a reduced selection now - I bought in Feb]
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Re: Fruit and Nut trees
I've got apple plum and cherry, but what I did was add a second apple tree that fuits in late Sep as the other one fruits in Aug, so maybe early and late varieties that will prevent gluts.snow hope wrote:I think I may have asked this before so apologies if I have. I have planted apple, pear, plum and cherry trees and they are all taking nicely now. I want to plant some more, that will be productive in the North UK climate. Can anybody suggest what other edible fruit/nut trees I should put in to my little mini-orchard? Thanks.
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- mikepepler
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Though I've been told chestnut needs a warm summer to give good nuts. Ours certainly bore this out last summer, when it wasn't very warm - we had plenty of nuts but they were all small.contadino wrote:On the nut front, both almond and chestnut are hugely versatile. You can make flour from the nuts, the shells go in the fire, the husks make good mulch, the wood of both is good. They both attract bees and they'll do well in the frozen north.
- Bedrock Barney
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The following are fairly reliable disease resistant fruits and nuts:
Mulberry
Elder - jews ear fungus / flowers - champagne, cordials, eat straight off the branch, fritters, tea / berries - wine, jellies, james, pies etc. Can affect cabbage if grown nearby - best to collect leaves and dispose as allelopathic.
Hazel
Black Walnut (lovely trees but might wait a while for the nuts)
Rowan - very ornamental - berries good for rowan jelly and as a decoy for birds.
Hawthorn - native, berries make excellent jelly, can be eaten raw although not very flavoursome. Can eat leaves in salads and make meals with buds and flowers. Can tolerate a lot of exposure. Good variety if you can get hold of it is Crataegus arnoldiana, which has fruits 2cm across.
White Mulberry tree - or hybrid between red-white. Reds don't crop well in UK or Ireland. Fruit is a bit like raspberries but awkward to pick. Flowers are frost hardy - can take the odd late frost. In NI will need a south facing wall and shelter.
Birch tree - you can make wine and drinks from the sap.
Gooseberry bushes (June-Aug)
Eleagnus shrubs - can use berries - April to May when other things aren't fruiting - good hedging and pretty hardy
Worcesterberry bushes - similar to gooseberry but larger, hardiers and more vigorous, although less fruit and it is very tart raw. Good in edible hedge or for no maintenance.
Blackcurrant bushes - easy to grow and good croppers.
Red currants - similar to blackcurrant but red. Birds very keen on them.
Mulberry
Elder - jews ear fungus / flowers - champagne, cordials, eat straight off the branch, fritters, tea / berries - wine, jellies, james, pies etc. Can affect cabbage if grown nearby - best to collect leaves and dispose as allelopathic.
Hazel
Black Walnut (lovely trees but might wait a while for the nuts)
Rowan - very ornamental - berries good for rowan jelly and as a decoy for birds.
Hawthorn - native, berries make excellent jelly, can be eaten raw although not very flavoursome. Can eat leaves in salads and make meals with buds and flowers. Can tolerate a lot of exposure. Good variety if you can get hold of it is Crataegus arnoldiana, which has fruits 2cm across.
White Mulberry tree - or hybrid between red-white. Reds don't crop well in UK or Ireland. Fruit is a bit like raspberries but awkward to pick. Flowers are frost hardy - can take the odd late frost. In NI will need a south facing wall and shelter.
Birch tree - you can make wine and drinks from the sap.
Gooseberry bushes (June-Aug)
Eleagnus shrubs - can use berries - April to May when other things aren't fruiting - good hedging and pretty hardy
Worcesterberry bushes - similar to gooseberry but larger, hardiers and more vigorous, although less fruit and it is very tart raw. Good in edible hedge or for no maintenance.
Blackcurrant bushes - easy to grow and good croppers.
Red currants - similar to blackcurrant but red. Birds very keen on them.
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Hi Michelle and welcome!
I too have planted Elderberry - there are some great rumours that it is wonderful for counteracting 'flu...... So I hope to make some Elderberry juice or wine (or both) this autumn.
These bushes are transplanted from my parent's place, where I know they gave a good crop - so here's hoping. My dad used to make wine so strong that he called it Elderberry Sherry!
I have 3 blueberries in an old fishbox filled with lime free compost - I gather they like to be very wet too.
And on the topic of drought - it's been REALLY dry here and I've been out with the hose pipe most nights trying to ensure the trees I planted earlier this year will survive. But the surrounding soil just seems to suck it up and everywhere is still dry looking. Established trees are happy but not the new ones......
I too have planted Elderberry - there are some great rumours that it is wonderful for counteracting 'flu...... So I hope to make some Elderberry juice or wine (or both) this autumn.
These bushes are transplanted from my parent's place, where I know they gave a good crop - so here's hoping. My dad used to make wine so strong that he called it Elderberry Sherry!
I have 3 blueberries in an old fishbox filled with lime free compost - I gather they like to be very wet too.
And on the topic of drought - it's been REALLY dry here and I've been out with the hose pipe most nights trying to ensure the trees I planted earlier this year will survive. But the surrounding soil just seems to suck it up and everywhere is still dry looking. Established trees are happy but not the new ones......