Planting Apple Trees I Grew From Seed
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024
- In this video I plant the apples trees that I harvested in October of 2019! You can watch that video here: • Growing Apple Trees fr...
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Me and my daughter enjoyed watching the last 3 vids regarding the apple trees! Just put some seeds in paper towels and bags in to the fridge 30mins ago 😊. Hopefully the climate here in central Alabama is a little kinder to these future trees!
That's wonderful! Good luck!
There is a talk done by Dr. Joel Wallick about diatomaceous earth. He and his wife bought a property with pomegranates trees that were not producing and she used pipes in the ground with a diatomaceous earth and water mixture within a couple of years. She was having bumper crops just an idea. I think I’m gonna try it when I start mine, I have apples in my truck right now
I think it would be cool if every few years that you do an update on these trees just to see how they are doing
Great suggestion. I'll aim to do an update this spring!
Please do, thank you@@RedfernFoodForest
I make apple sauce and suggest you find an apple tree you like and cut a "scion" for grafting in mid-summer. ...
Good suggestion
it looks wet there... if that's the case don't plant trees in holes, plant them in mounds.
Sometimes wet, sometimes dry.
What are your goals for next season in 2022?
Have the wildlife not destroy everything I plant!
The reason the Apple trees are different even though they came from the same Apple is because the apples genetics come from the 7,500 different species of apples. Just like humans. Crazy cool!
Crazy cool indeed!
Where are you from I am in Scotland Glasgow try the same plant and lots of different types of apple seeds all over an unused piece of ground to see what happens I would recommend you eat the apples and let the viewers know what they taste like and after letting of yours know what the apples taste like we plant the seeds and plant as many different apple seeds as you can see what you get keep up the great work enjoy the video just came across it today
Thanks! Michigan, USA
The fact that you digging your self a hole cause you didn’t consult the wife first 😅 Interesting 🤔 …….
Yikes!
love
Thanks!
so 2 years later...how are the trees Mark?
3 are alive and growing!
I started some a little over a month ago interested to see an updated video for this
It's definitely on my list!
Fences are. available
Oh?
Well done, I wonder how they look now, keep us updated please. Thank you for explaining all these stuff, that vid was very beneficial for people who wants to plant apple trees
Thanks for your kind comment. I hope to provide an update in the coming months.
@@RedfernFoodForest 💪🏻💪🏻😇
Nice seeing some green this winter. Hopefully those trees continue to grow in 2022!
I hope so. 🤞
Love your video, I have Arkansas blacks from 100 year orchard. I am going to cold refrig now in Nov. Is there a possibility they will not produce the delicious apples from the mother plant?
Very possible. But you'll never know without trying!
Yeah, don’t put the grass in the hole folks. Just dirt and maybe chicken scat fertilizer.
Wise advice.
Thank you for sharing this video. I am trying to grow the apples from seed myself! ... 😊
That's great! Let me know how it works out!
I planted pear and apple seeds roughly 15 years ago. Not one of my 70 trees is providing edible fruit. The apples are crabapples, and the pears are bradford pears. This may be fun, and may produce mast for wildlife, but you're unlikely to get fruit you want to eat.
That's good to know
So the Bradford pears likely pollinated the pears you took the seeds from?
@@waylonlegend4603 I guess so. But based on my results, Bradfords are very good at pollenating everything. Maybe there's another explanation. I don't know.
1 year later, How did they do?
Still growing!
@@RedfernFoodForest it's 2024 please let us know how the apple trees that you transplanted in 2019 you did from seed. How are they doing?
What do you think they’ll turn out to be? Is there a chance they are a fruitless tree? I’m curious
They won't be fruitless, but other than that there is no way of knowing what they will turn out to be!
Also would be great for
Thanks
You’ve inspired me I’ll start my journey tomorrow.
Awesome! Have fun!
Different job thank you for sharing
You're welcome!
Thanks. Great video.
Thanks!
We tried scattering apples every year for 15 years at my parents. 50 plus apple trees and not a one produced good apples. Soon (~5 years) I'll be cutting them down for smoking meat and firewood.
At least you get the wood out of them!
@@RedfernFoodForest Oh yeah its great wood. We also did it with black walnuts. that was a bit more fruitful, so to speak.
Define good apple? Sounds like you planted a wild orchard and likely got some great cider apples for hard cider. Spitters and chokers is the slang. Ugly, too. Don't compare your apples to the supermarket clones. Reconsider cutting them down , ferment some cider or get a local enthusiast to harvest and ferment. Your yard sounds like a treasure to me.
@@juliazimmermann8313 LOL theyre bad to eat. At best theyre good for getting pectin. No, they are not going to be making cider out of these things. Thats silly. Theyre smaller than a grape and rock hard. Youd be harvesting for hours just to get a quarts worth of cider. Another thing they'll be good for (for me anyway) is to be used as firewood and for my meat smoker. :)
@@juliazimmermann8313 And the good apples are still wild. They were found in the wild once long ago and then grafted to root stock. That grafting probably predates grocery stores. 100% natural.
update plsssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
Two are alive. I will provide an update video next year.
@@RedfernFoodForestupdate??
I made wine with the crapload of apples I got from the school lunch pickups during the at-home learning lockdowns. My kids couldn't eat them fast enough. 😂
In fact, I made a lot of 100% juice or fruit wines. It was super easy, no special equipment outside of some extra silicone fish airline for racking which came from my hydroponic supplies. Sugar, juice/fruit, yeast, and at least 3 weeks sitting time. That's it!
That's super cool. I want to try...