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Adam’s Pearmain
Apples have a distinctive conical shape and are coloured crimson red with patches of fine russet when ripe. Keeps well.
Picking time: October
Storage until: March -
Ashmead’s Kernel
Ashmeads Kernel is a very old variety producing excellent quality brown russeted apples, crisp & juicy, that keep well.
Picking time: mid October
Storage until: February -
Beauty of Bath
Beauty of Bath is a very early dessert apple picked from late July. Medium sized flat round apples largely flushed bright red.
Picking time: late July
Storage until: does not keep -
Bloody Ploughman
Produces conical apples with distinct ribbing. It’s blood red skin is a little tough, beneath the sweet tasting flesh is heavily pink tinged.
Picking time: mid September
Storage until: November -
Bountiful
A good alternative to Bramley. The large apples are sub acid requiring little or no sugar when cooked and can be eaten as a dessert apple by late winter.
Picking time: late September
Storage until: January -
Bright Future
Introduced to celebrate 50 years of Garden Organic. It’s flavour is good with a nice sweet acid combination. A very good keeper.
Picking time: mid October
Storage until: January -
Brown’s Apple
Early ripening, Brown’s Apple can produce very heavy crops of bright red flushed apples that are quite large for a cider variety. Produces a very good fresh sharp cider.
Flowering time – mid season
Harvest – mid October -
Catshead
What an evocative name! In profile on its side the shape lives up to its name. Large apples that are distinctly ribbed, often squareish.
Pollination group – C
Picking time – early October
Storage until – January -
Cevaal
An excellent Cox like apple with an enjoyable rich honeyed flavour. Attractive medium sized apples with yellow skin flushed red.
Picking time: early/mid September
Storage until: late October -
Charles Ross
Good-looking large dual-purpose apple. Flushed and striped warm orange red similar to Cox which is one of its parents. Sweet flavoured eater that bakes well.
Pollination Group – C
Picking time: mid September
Storage until: December -
Christmas Pippin ®
A recent introduction Christmas Pippin produces heavy crops of high quality sweet apples. Skin flushed red over it’s base colour making it a good looking apple.
Pollination group – C
Picking time – early October
Storage until – December -
Dabinett
A well known cider variety. A bittersweet. Regular cropping, producing a high quality cider. Much grown in commercial orchards because of its reliable cropping and the quality of its cider.
Flowering time – mid/late season
Harvest time- early November -
Discovery
One of the earliest dessert apples picked from mid August when crisp, juicy & sweet. Skin bright crimson. The flesh can also be tinged pink around the edges.
Pollination group – C
Picking time – August
Storage until – does not keep -
Doddin
An unusual variety. Doddin apples are small bright green, smooth skinned and elongated becoming ripe in late July / early August. Juicy and sweet.
Pollination group – C
Picking time – early August
Storage until – does not keep -
Edward VII
An excellent late keeping variety. Smooth, round, green apples that develop a pinkish brown flush. Creamy flesh acid with a nice flavour.
Pollination group – E
Picking time – mid October
Storage until – April -
Egremont Russet
The most well known UK russet. Dry golden skin with large areas of brown russet. Crisp flavour, nutty and sweet. A trouble-free variety.
Pollination group – B
Picking time – late September
Storage until – December -
Ellison’s Orange
An early dessert flushed brownish red with stripes of brighter red mixed in. slightly conical in shape. Creamy white flesh has a rich taste with a somewhat aniseed flavour.
Pollination group – D
Picking time – September
Storage until – October -
Fortune
A good garden variety of compact habit. Fortune produces medium sized round apples largely coloured bright red. Sweet, juicy with acidity.
Pollination group – C
Picking time – mid September
Storage until – October