At last my double grafted Apple tree is flowering , I was interested and a little concerned about whether the two varieties would blossom at the same time ,the tree has one branch "Granny Smith" a green apple that's good for cooking with ,and one branch "Red delicious" a very nice eating apple . The theory behind "family" or multi graft apple trees, apart from novelty or space saving reasons , is that one variety will pollinate the other so instead of requiring different trees to pollinate each other, the one tree with its two types will look after itself
the first blossoms
Blueberries ?
My Blueberries have also sprung into action ,after being covered in masses of white flowers now it would appear little BLUEBERRIES are forming( I am not really sure how its supposed to work never having grown them before ) I know they like acid soil but i am a little undecided about using peat in the garden ( destroying wetland seems a bit drastic ) so i used tea mulch spread quite thickly around the base of the plants. The tea was given to me by rw scissors who obtained it from an ice tea manufacturer who use real tea leaves in their drinks. I figured tea plants are camellias which like acid soils so by my fuzzy logic
tea leaves=acid
I also knew that even though the labels say that some varieties are self fertile and don't require pollinators ,they will crop better if you have multiple plants near each other so earlier on in the year I managed to propagate some sucker growth and now I have multiple plants !
Blueberries ?
My Blueberries have also sprung into action ,after being covered in masses of white flowers now it would appear little BLUEBERRIES are forming( I am not really sure how its supposed to work never having grown them before ) I know they like acid soil but i am a little undecided about using peat in the garden ( destroying wetland seems a bit drastic ) so i used tea mulch spread quite thickly around the base of the plants. The tea was given to me by rw scissors who obtained it from an ice tea manufacturer who use real tea leaves in their drinks. I figured tea plants are camellias which like acid soils so by my fuzzy logic
tea leaves=acid
I also knew that even though the labels say that some varieties are self fertile and don't require pollinators ,they will crop better if you have multiple plants near each other so earlier on in the year I managed to propagate some sucker growth and now I have multiple plants !