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APPLE Peasgood Nonsuch

Peasgood Nonsuch is a juicy fresh eating apple with a large, handsome and regular shape. This versatile apple cooks to a sweet and delicately flavoured puree, bakes well and makes a great addition to salads. A good, regular cropper and a reasonably disease resistant tree. Self fertile variety. Spur bearing in the mid-late season. 

 

Self Fertile Disease Resistant Heritage Cooking
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Planting                        
Harvesting                    

Pollination

Peasgood Nonsuch is a self fertile variety.  If you are having trouble with pollination, try planting the following varieties. 

Pollinators include: mid flowering varieties

Adore® Freyberg Monty's Surprise
Ariane Gala Pink Lady®
Baujade Golden Delicious Priscilla
Blenheim Orange Granny Smith Red Delicious
Bramley's Seedling Hetlina Royal Gala
Cox's Orange Pippin Initial* Telstar
Dayton Kidd's Orange Red Tentation™ (Delblush*)
Divine® Laxton's Fortune Winter Banana
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Rootstock

Waimea Nurseries has one of the best selections of apple rootstocks available, from being a tree grower for commercial orchardists. We grow this variety on the following rootstocks. Main reasons for different rootstocks being used is to control mature tree size, fruiting age, soil conditions and disease resistance.

 

M9 Dwarf

Tree height: 3m

Start to fruit in its second to third year. 
Requires permanent staking and attention to soil condition, fertilization and watering. Spacing required - 2.5m between trees. 
Resistant to phytophora.

Suits well drained, fertile soils. Not suitable for heavy clay soils. Requires tree suport (eg. post & wires) Due to the shallow and weak root system.

 

MM106 Semi Dwarf

Tree height: 4.5m

Starts to fruit in its third to forth year. 
Requires temporary stake. 
Spacing required - 3m+ between trees. 
Resistant to Woolly Apple aphid.

Good on most soils, except poorly drained sites

 

Not all rootstock and variety combinations are available each year.

Planting & Tree Care

General Apple tree information:

Apple trees will start to produce fruit between its second to fifth year depending on rootstock.  (Please refer to rootstock tab).

Fruit will produce on either tips or spurs. Some varieties produces fruit on both. (Please refer to description above).

Fruit is ripe when the shaded side turns from green to a greeny/yellow colour.

The later the Apple trees fruit ripens, the longer the storage life.

Planting:

Apple trees perform best in temperate areas. Most varieties need plenty of winter chill, but there are low chill varieties available for warmer climates. (Check out description above).

Apple trees like planting sites that are sunny, and sheltered. Soil preferences depends on rootstocks. (Please refer to rootstock tab).

General Care:

Water Apples well during early planting stages, long dry periods and when fruit is developing.

Some Apple varieties require a spray program to control pests and diseases that affect the tree, leaves and fruit.

To ensure large apples each year and prevent biennial bearing, thin apple bunches by half.

Pruning and Training:

Best to prune Apple trees in late winter so cuts heal faster with spring flush. To minimise disease entering tree, paint cuts with pruning paste.

  • Spur bearing: Reduce growth made the year before, by a third. Cut just after a good strong bud, that points in the direction you want the new branch to go.
  • Tip bearing: All of last years growth on main shoots should be pruned off to the first/second strong and healthy bud. (Unless new shoots are less than 12 inches long).

Prune into a modified central leader or vase shaped tree, or espailer against a wall or fence in triple horizontal cordon, candelarra or double-U shape.

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