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Seriate pollinator duo for your pastries

Malus domestica Belle de Boskoop, Reine des Reinettes

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Vine-plants received in November 2020. Pruning in accordance with the description. Good growth in the spring.

Denis, 02/06/2021

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Collection contains 2 plants

  • 1 x Apple Tree Belle de Boskoop - Malus domestica
  • 1 x Apple Tree Reine des Reinettes

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

A duo of 'Belle de Boskoop' and 'Queen of the Pippins' apple trees, two cooking apple varieties ideal for baking. Planted in the same garden, these fruit trees cross-pollinate each other, ensuring a bountiful harvest from September to November. Young plants with bare roots, trained in a goblet shape.
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -20°C
Soil type
Clayey (heavy), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Best planting time October to November
Recommended planting time January to February, October to December
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Flowering time April
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M
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Harvest time September to November
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F
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Collection items (2 plants)

  • Apple Tree Belle de Boskoop - Malus domestica

    Price per single item: €34.50
    Find out more
  • Apple Tree Reine des Reinettes

    Price per single item: €34.50
    Find out more

Description

This apple pollinator duo for your pastries brings together the varieties 'Belle de Boskoop' and 'Queen of the Pippins', which produce excellent cooking apples that are appreciated for making pies, fritters, clafoutis, and other baked goods. Planted in the same garden, these two apple trees that blossom together in spring pollinate each other, ensuring an abundant harvest from early September to late November. Bare-root fruit plants should be planted upon receipt, preferably in autumn.

This duo consists of:

- x1 'Queen of the Pippins' Apple Tree: a vigorous and productive variety, very resistant to cold and diseases. Highly appreciated in pastry making, it is thanks to its deliciously tangy and fragrant apple that the famous Tarte Tatin owes its success. Its fruits, about 7 cm (3in) in diameter, are covered with a red-yellow golden skin. Their flesh is pale, juicy, fine, and crunchy, both sweet and tangy, with a slight walnut taste that makes it irresistible. The harvest begins at the beginning of ripeness, in early September, and lasts until October. The Queen of the Pippins stores very well after harvest and can be consumed throughout the winter, until March. It will be necessary to thin it out to avoid small fruit size and the occurrence of diseases. This apple tree is an excellent pollinator.

- x1 'Belle de Boskoop' Apple Tree: a variety of good vigor and productivity. It produces large, irregularly round fruits, light green to yellow with red spots. Their flesh is granular, semi-crisp, juicy, and tangy. The harvest takes place in late October and November. They can be stored until March. This apple tree is resistant to canker, scab, and cold.

Individually labeled

The apple tree is native to Europe, including France, where its presence has been documented since antiquity. It is a tree with a semi-erect, elegant habit. Its deciduous foliage falls in autumn. It consists of very large, ovate, slightly hairy leaves that are greenish-brown on the upper side and whitish-green on the lower side, deeply toothed. The flowering occurs in April, and it is not afraid of frost. The apple tree is therefore suitable for cultivation in mountainous areas.

In the kitchen:

'Belle de Boskoop' and 'Queen of the Pippins' apples can of course be eaten as they are, but they are particularly appreciated in desserts and pastries. You can also use them in savory dishes (with black pudding, red cabbage, or sausages), or in combination with cheeses, for example.

A bush-trained fruit tree does not have a central leader (vertical main stem) but has branches radiating from its trunk. This particular shape allows for good penetration of sunlight and air into the canopy, which promotes the development and ripening of fruits while limiting the development of diseases.

Plant habit

Height at maturity 6 m
Spread at maturity 5 m
Growth rate normal

Fruit

Fruit colour green
Fruit diameter 7 cm
Flavour Sugary
Use Table, Jam, Compote, Patisserie, Cooking
Harvest time September to November

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time April
Inflorescence Solitary
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Malus

Species

domestica

Cultivar

Belle de Boskoop, Reine des Reinettes

Family

Rosaceae

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

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Planting and care

Choose a sunny spot for your apple tree, the soil can be slightly chalky or acidic but not excessively so. Dig a wide planting hole at least 3 times the volume of the rootball. Simultaneously add organic matter (topsoil, compost) and a base fertilizer such as crushed bone. Do not bury the graft collar. Stake if necessary. Water abundantly, even in winter, even if it rains. Fruit trees are ideally planted between October and March, outside the freezing period. Container-grown plants can be planted all year round except during periods of extreme heat or frost.

You can add, during winter, a small handful of wood ash, rich in potash, to improve fruiting. Watch out for possible aphid attacks during the season. A white powdery mildew caused by a fungus, powdery mildew, may appear on the leaves in summer, but it does not harm fruit development in gardens. Harvest takes place in September. Only keep the picked fruits. Apples should be stored with the peduncle downwards, on shelves or in crates. Choose a preferably completely dark, dry and cool place, but frost-free.

Planting period

Best planting time October to November
Recommended planting time January to February, October to December

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Free-standing, Orchard
Hardiness Hardy down to -20°C (USDA zone 6b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 1 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Any
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light), deep, friable, fertile

Care

Pruning instructions The pruning of your apple tree can be limited to a simple thinning out of dead or obstructive branches at the end of winter, in March. During the first 3 or 4 years, you can also encourage the formation of 4 or 5 main branches, resulting in a goblet habit, which is traditional in fruit tree cultivation. In any case, make sure to leave some spaces in the tree structure for good air circulation and light. Don't hesitate to thin out fruit clusters in June. Removing some fruits relieves the fragile branches and helps achieve a better size.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time February to March
Soil moisture Wet
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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