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its a shame when a good apple tree is cut down
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stren
With really sweet apples. Hard and juicy.
It was at my grandmas house and i dunno why my uncle cut it :( We have no idea what kind was it, cause only my grandfather knew, and he's long gone
tribu
quote:
Originally posted by stren
With really sweet apples. Hard and juicy.
It was at my grandmas house and i dunno why my uncle cut it :( We have no idea what kind was it, cause only my grandfather knew, and he's long gone


If you have any of the apples, a few pictures of the tree, or really any other identifying feature, it should be easy to find out.

Obtaining seeds to grow another one...that's where the challenge is.
stren
quote:
Originally posted by tribu
If you have any of the apples, a few pictures of the tree, or really any other identifying feature, it should be easy to find out.

Obtaining seeds to grow another one...that's where the challenge is.


for some reason i thought you will be the first one to post here lol



sadly, i don't have any apples left, cause it was cut before i knew it was going to be. Maybe there are some old pic tho. I don't think its a well known kind (maybe its a crossbreed ?) It wasn't one of those commertial type of apples that are resistant to pests and all taste the same
trance4life627
i reside in washington state...more apple trees here than we know what to do with
tribu
quote:
Originally posted by stren
for some reason i thought you will be the first one to post here lol

sadly, i don't have any apples left, cause it was cut before i knew it was going to be. Maybe there are some old pic tho. I don't think its a well known kind (maybe its a crossbreed ?) It wasn't one of those commertial type of apples that are resistant to pests and all taste the same


Maybe it was the tree in the title, maybe it was the fact that I post in most threads when I'm bored.

In any case, I work for a grocer that sells a wide variety of locally grown apples, i.e. not the commercially grown acres and acres type. A function of this is that I have access to a handful of people who know hundreds of different types of trees and apples, and can identify them by sight, taste, etc. It's always worth a try if you want to ID the tree.

Check the ground around the spot of the tree for seeds. Check your grandfather's old housing and income tax records. There's plenty of resources you can use to find the info you want, depending on how bad you want to know.
willson
I have nothing really to contribute to the thread.
But to let you all know I have my own apple tree,and tonight with my pork I had apple sauce.... which we made from the apples from the tree.
Was delicious :D

That is all.
Continue.
stren
quote:
Originally posted by tribu
Maybe it was the tree in the title, maybe it was the fact that I post in most threads when I'm bored.

In any case, I work for a grocer that sells a wide variety of locally grown apples, i.e. not the commercially grown acres and acres type. A function of this is that I have access to a handful of people who know hundreds of different types of trees and apples, and can identify them by sight, taste, etc. It's always worth a try if you want to ID the tree.

Check the ground around the spot of the tree for seeds. Check your grandfather's old housing and income tax records. There's plenty of resources you can use to find the info you want, depending on how bad you want to know.


my aunt says it uelsa? wellsa? (not sure of the spelling) i'm gonna look for some photos,
igottaknow
my parents have apple trees but they're the small bitter type only good for pies, think they're called Crab Apples, i kid you not.
Sunsnail
quote:
Originally posted by igottaknow
my parents have apple trees but they're the small bitter type only good for pies, think they're called Crab Apples, i kid you not.


yeah, my grandparents have these. They're very small and sour.
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