Fruit Trees
Growing your own food should be as rewarding as the harvest itself. At Roots to Fruits Nursery, we provide everything from Mini-Dwarf varieties for patio gardening to Standard trees for the big back forty. We take pride in our grading system, offering Petite and Maiden trees for those who love to shape their own growth, or Field Ready and Hand Select specimens for aspiring and seasoned orchardists who want to see fruit on the branch in just a year or two. Whether you're after a classic Honeycrisp or a cold-hardy Toka Plum our trees are grown to thrive in your landscape.
Our Tree Sizes at Maturity: Mini-Dwarf (3-6'), and Dwarf (6-10'), which don't require as much space as well as the larger Semi-Dwarf (12-18') and the largest, Standard/Seedling (20'+).
A few helpful notes:
- Trees must be planted in well drained soil. Consider testing your soil to see the best compatibility of trees for your site.
- 6 hours of sunlight with full sun preferred.
- Stake all trees for the first 2 years.
- Dwarfs must have permanent stakes. Be sure to check the ties as the tree grows so as not to girth it.
- Tree guards and protection should be used to protect from rabbits and deer.
- Check pollinator requirements (other fruit trees) for your trees of choice.
- Plant disease resistant trees for less maintenance.
Our Tree Sizes at Time of Purchase:
Petite: Our smallest graded tree less than 2 years in age, branchless and will bear fruit in 4-5 years.
Maiden: 2 years old, branchless 3-5' tall or 1/2" caliper and will bear fruit in 2-3 years.
Field Ready: 2-3 years old and might have some lateral branching, 5-6' tall or 5/8" caliper, are thicker above the graft, and will bear in 1-2 years.
Hand Select: 3 year old trees, 6-9' tall or 3/4" caliper, can be more heavily branched and fruit in about a year.
Container: Branched, rooted in pots, and often larger, 5-10'. Available for free pick-up at our Gays Mills, WI location and delivery within 200 miles to our noted zones (See our Spee-Dee partner Service Area Map).
Burbank Plum
Mid-harvest season. Tree is hardy and low growing with a flat top. Fruit is large. Skin color is red with some yellow blush. Plum is firm and juicy...
View full detailsRed Gravenstein Apple Tree
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View full detailsLittle Ruby Fig Tree
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View full detailsStory® Inored Apple Tree
Made available to the public in the 2000s, the Story® Apple (or Story® Inored) is a disease resistant variety from the Novadi Corporation in France...
View full detailsRoseland Red Honeycrisp Apple Tree
Introduced in Minnesota in 1991, the Roseland Red Honey Crisp (RRHC) is a local favorite. The tree is one of the most vigorous and hardy of apple t...
View full detailsFrettingham Crabapple Trees
A Mid- Late season bloomer, these white blossomed, single petaled crabapples are small and numerous on the tree. Excellent pollinators for apple tr...
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Germany, 1990s. Cross between Golden Delicious × (Duchess of Oldenburg × Cox’s Orange Pippin). Excellent eater with crisp flesh and striated skin. ...
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An old English (Essex) variety bred in 1888 by crossing a Peasgood's Nonsuch (probably the coolest apple name ever) with a Dumelow's Seedling and c...
View full detailsStoke Red Apple Tree
Named for Rodney Stoke in Somerset, England- this is an old cider apple. It finally became popular in the 1920s though the tree was almost certainl...
View full detailsLSU Fig Tree
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View full detailsCanadian Harmony Peach Tree
The Canadian Harmony peach tree is a cold-hardy cultivar developed in Ontario, Canada, and is especially well-suited to northern climates such as U...
View full detailsElstar Apple Tree
Dutch dessert apple first crossed in the 1950s. It can count the Golden Delicious in its parentage which gives the apple a well balanced flavor tha...
View full detailsJonadel Apple Trees
Apple is slightly elongated with a small bulge in the middle. Its skin has an orange hue to it that transitions to a bright red color when exposed ...
View full detailsEmpress Apple Tree
L. Frederic Hough of Rutgers University first crossed this tree in 1969 by pairing the Jonamac x Vista Bells apples. The tree, having a similar sha...
View full detailsHarrison Apple Trees
The Harrison Cider Apple was lost to history until 1976 when a fruit collector rediscovered the tree growing next to a defunct cider mill near Oran...
View full detailsBlack Twig Apple Tree
Unlike the name suggests, Black Twig apples are neither black nor are they twig shaped. Found by chance in Tennessee in the 1830s, this apple was t...
View full detailsOlympian Fig Tree
Produces large, sweet, slightly purple-ish fruit in small clusters. The leaves are typically fig shaped and are decorative, glossy, and shiny. USD...
View full detailsKandil Sinap Apple Tree
Discovered in the Sinop Peninsula- modern day Turkey- in the 1700s. The apple is strikingly long and oblong in shape; similar to an early Strawberr...
View full detailsCampfield Apple Tree
First discovered in New Jersey in the late 1700s at a farm owned by a Mr. Matthew Campfield (hence the name) and soon because a renowned cider appl...
View full detailsDick's Delicious Apple Tree
A discovered foundling from right here in Gays Mills, WI. This early September variety is a larger sport of the Red Delicious Apple. It can vary in...
View full detailsMajor Apple Tree
An English cider apple producing a full bittersweet juice. USDA Zone: 4-9 Mature Height: G.41 ~12-14' Dwarf Sun: Full Sun Bloom Group: 3 Mid Seaso...
View full detailsHoliday Apple Trees
Discovered in Ohio in 1964. The offspring of the Jonathan and Macoun Apples making this apple an excellent dessert apple. USDA Zone: 4-9 Mature He...
View full detailsClaygate Pearmain Apple Tree
Popular eating apple from Victorian England. Noted for a strong resistance to apple scab. USDA Zone: 4-8 Mature Height: G.935 ~11-13' tall; Dwarf ...
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