Dwarf Apple Trees
Discover our selection of dwarf apple trees, perfect for home orchards, backyard gardens, and container growing. These compact trees offer full-sized, flavorful apples while taking up minimal space, making them ideal for small yards or urban gardens. With manageable heights of 8-12 feet, dwarf apple trees are easy to prune, care for, and harvest without the need for ladders.
Our collection includes popular heirloom and modern varieties, each selected for its exceptional taste, disease resistance, and reliable production. Whether you're looking for a crisp and tart apple for fresh eating, a sweet variety for baking, or an all-purpose favorite, you'll find the perfect match.
Twenty Ounce Apple Tree
This American heirloom variety has been around since at least the 1840s. George Howland of New Bedford, MA exhibited this apple for the Massachuset...
View full detailsFlemish Beauty Pear Trees
Originally discovered in Deftinge, Belgium during the Napoleonic Wars of 1810 by a Belgian pear 'enthusiast named Jean-Baptiste Van Mons. Van Mons ...
View full detailsCrimson™ Gold Apple Tree
This is a medium sized apple that ripens in early September. It is yellow covered with a ruby red blush and is a great making and eating apple. It ...
View full detailsDabinett Apple Tree
The Dabinett Apple dates back to a chance discovery by William Dabinett (for whom it is named) in the early 1800s at his orchard in Somerset, Engla...
View full detailsShinseiki Pear Tree
Your standard globular golden Asian pear- the Shinseiki Pear is native to east Asia and Japan. Hardy down to USDA Zone 5, this Pear makes a great a...
View full detailsSuncrisp® Apple
Bred in 1963 at the Rutgers University Horticultural Research Farm by crossing an offspring of Cortland and Cox Orange Pippin with a Golden Delicio...
View full detailsCreston Apple Tree
Developed in the 1990s by the Pacific Agri-Food Centre in British Columbia and is another offspring of the prodigious Golden Delicious. This apple ...
View full detailsEsopus Spitzenburg Apple Trees
Dutch settlers discovered this apple along the Hudson River near a settlement called Esopus- hence its name- which stands about halfway between New...
View full detailsHarrowcrisp Pear Trees
Light green and creamy in color, medium sized pear. Early season harvester. Ships Spring 2025. USDA Zone: 4-8 Mature Heights: OHxF 87: ~15-18' tall...
View full detailsState Fair Apple Tree
This apple ripens around the time of the Minnesota State Fair, hence the name, and is the parent of another earl variety also of UofM: Zestar. Deve...
View full detailsChojuro Pear Tree
Discovered in Kawasaki, Japan in 1895 appearing redder than other pears nearby. Round and golden in color- the Chojuro pear is similar to other Asi...
View full detailsYellow Newton Apple Tree
The Yellow Newton is a chance seedling from an older English variety brought to the US in 1755 by Dr. Thomas Walker. The apple grew well in Albemar...
View full detailsTsugaru Apple Tree
Released to the public in 1975 from the Aomori Apple Experimental Research Station in northern Japan; it is a cross between the Golden Delicious an...
View full detailsBinet Rouge Apple Tree
Grown in the Normandy region of France and noted as early as the 1870s, the Binet Rouge apple is primarily a cider apple. Designated as one of seve...
View full detailsFortune Apple Trees
Fortune is a hybrid from Cornell University developed by combining the Schoharie Spy with the disease-resistant Empire. The result was a high-perf...
View full detailsHarrowsweet Pear Trees
Light green and creamy in color, medium sized pear. Early season harvester. Lightly blushed when ripe. Ships Spring 2025. USDA Zone: 4-8 Mature Hei...
View full detailsBlack Oxford Tree
This Apple hails from Oxford County, Maine and was discovered by Nathanial Haskell in 1790. This very tree, still standing in 1907, is well known t...
View full detailsSpigold Apple Tree
The NY Agricultural Research Station introduced the Spigold apple to the public in 1962 and is a cross between the Golden Delicious and Red Spy App...
View full detailsBlue Pearmain Apple Tree
American Heirloom Apple Variety. Discovered in Massachusetts in the late 1700s. Generally used for multiple purposed and its coarse-grained juicy f...
View full detailsSierra Beauty Apple Tree
This seedling tree was discovered in the high Sierra Mountains in California and thought to be a left over from the 1840s Gold Rush. Therefore, the...
View full detailsTolman Sweet Apple Tree
A New England heirloom whose early lineage remains a mystery. The earliest reports of its existence date back to before 1700. The medium to large a...
View full detailsReinette Zabergau Apple Tree
The Zaber is a small tributary of the Neckar River in Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany. This southern State produced an apple- less common crop than neig...
View full detailsHubbardston Nonesuch Apple Tree
Ok, this is a ridiculously sounding name but it actually has kind of an interesting history. The Hubbardston comes from a town in Massachusetts. Th...
View full detailsAnna Apple Tree
Very early fruiting apple from Israel that can grow in warmer climates. USDA Zone: 5-10 Mature Height: M.111 ~18-21' tall; Semi-Dwarf Sun: Full Su...
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