What a happy little fella you are ;-) Nice video. I live in Europe and the nashi trees I have are An benpear, Benito, Hakko, Hosui, Kosui, Kumoi, Mischiraz, Nashi Red, New World, Niitaka, Nijisseiki, Seuri Li, Shinko, Shinseiki and Sik Chon E Pear. I like the Hosui very much and it gives an abundance of fruit, each year over and over. I recommend nashi to all of my friends while it's not yet well known over here.
Hi, I'm from France and looking for a late harvest tree, with excellent fruit and not a huge tree. I have been told Shinko or Korean Giant.... do you have any suggestion ? Thanks
Cool video young man. I do remember your earlier videos created when you were much younger. I found them as I was searching online to learn more about my Hosui and New Century dwarf asian pear trees. I have about 4 Hosui's and two New Century asian pear trees. I also have European style pear trees in my home orchard to include Bartlett, Kiefer, Hood, Flordahome, and Baldwin. My trees are much younger so it's nice to look at your video's and learn about what I should expect from mine as they grow. Cheers and thanks for posting!
@@sharoncourt75 I am in USDA Zone 9b in Central Florida USA. We usually get about 100-200 chill hours every years and the Asian pears seems to be ok with it. My low chill pear trees have been a very pleasant surprise to grow in my garden. I like them much more than my apple trees because they give me fewer problems.
Thank you so much for all these details in the description ! Very nice video as well. I dream of having my own nashi pear trees in my garden but as I live on an island (Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean), there are a lot of sanitary restrictions concerning plants and we usually have to buy trees in local nurseries...with a limited choice. Would it be possible for you to send Hosui and Shinseiki seeds from your lovely orchard after this year's harvest to Reunion Island where I live (against money, of course) ?
Found a few Asian pears on my yard, but the fruits are very small and the texture is rather grainy. The trees rather tall. Took me a bit to figure out that they were Asian pears. Now that I know, I intend to start to actually care for them, instead of letting them continue to grow wild.
Hi, Very nice video. What would you recommend for a late harvest fruit, with excellent fruit and no so big a tree ? People told me Shinko, others Korean Giant .... any idea ? Thanks from France
I would advise put the name of varieties on screen when you introduce the variety. I couldn't make out your pronunciation and understand the type of tree.
So glad to see the younger generation interested in agriculture. Best wishes to you son.
Very nice video, thank you Aiman
What a happy little fella you are ;-) Nice video. I live in Europe and the nashi trees I have are An benpear, Benito, Hakko, Hosui, Kosui, Kumoi, Mischiraz, Nashi Red, New World, Niitaka, Nijisseiki, Seuri Li, Shinko, Shinseiki and Sik Chon E Pear. I like the Hosui very much and it gives an abundance of fruit, each year over and over. I recommend nashi to all of my friends while it's not yet well known over here.
Hi, I'm from France and looking for a late harvest tree, with excellent fruit and not a huge tree. I have been told Shinko or Korean Giant.... do you have any suggestion ? Thanks
And how about the Kosui ?
Cool video young man. I do remember your earlier videos created when you were much younger. I found them as I was searching online to learn more about my Hosui and New Century dwarf asian pear trees. I have about 4 Hosui's and two New Century asian pear trees. I also have European style pear trees in my home orchard to include Bartlett, Kiefer, Hood, Flordahome, and Baldwin. My trees are much younger so it's nice to look at your video's and learn about what I should expect from mine as they grow. Cheers and thanks for posting!
Jose casero what climate are you in? I had a 2 on 1 housing and chonjuro but it died
@@sharoncourt75 I am in USDA Zone 9b in Central Florida USA. We usually get about 100-200 chill hours every years and the Asian pears seems to be ok with it. My low chill pear trees have been a very pleasant surprise to grow in my garden. I like them much more than my apple trees because they give me fewer problems.
thank you for sharing you are very knowledgeable
Nice and on point! :) Thank you, it helped me.
Thank you so much for all these details in the description ! Very nice video as well. I dream of having my own nashi pear trees in my garden but as I live on an island (Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean), there are a lot of sanitary restrictions concerning plants and we usually have to buy trees in local nurseries...with a limited choice. Would it be possible for you to send Hosui and Shinseiki seeds from your lovely orchard after this year's harvest to Reunion Island where I live (against money, of course) ?
Found a few Asian pears on my yard, but the fruits are very small and the texture is rather grainy. The trees rather tall. Took me a bit to figure out that they were Asian pears. Now that I know, I intend to start to actually care for them, instead of letting them continue to grow wild.
What variety do you recommend for the most compact smallest tree
Hi, Very nice video. What would you recommend for a late harvest fruit, with excellent fruit and no so big a tree ? People told me Shinko, others Korean Giant .... any idea ? Thanks from France
Awesome great keep it up son.
How far apart do you have your trees planted?
Ahhh I would love to have such a garden
How are the Pears trees doing now!
How many years does it take to bear fruit.
What climate are you in please? I am i Kansas and hope they take off well zone 6B
Should be good
assalamualaikum aiman..nice video..from Malaysia
Does the century Asian pear tree look like a pear when it first bears fruit?
The sound vídeo is very low.
I would advise put the name of varieties on screen when you introduce the variety. I couldn't make out your pronunciation and understand the type of tree.
👌🏼👌🏼
Tu tu ruuuuu!
❤❤❤