In-Stock Products Only
Tsugaru Apple Scionwood
For a lengthy history and description of the Tsugaru Apple, please see its main apple page. Scionwood is ~10-12" long, at least ¼" in caliper, and ...
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 detailsTulip Poplar Tree
Native to the eastern United States populating the forests from Florida to Quebec and Massachusetts to Illinois. The tree reaches astounding height...
View full detailsWealthy Apple Tree
One of the earliest cold hardy varieties in Minnesota (though not from the University!). In the 1860s, Peter Gideon was finally able to cross his l...
View full detailsWeeping Beech Tree
Fagus sylvatica 'Pendula' for those interested, is the name for the Weeping Beech. Currently at heights barely hovering above 8', this deciduous tr...
View full detailsWestminister Crabapple Tree
Discovered at 1913 Kickapoo Orchard and grafted from a single specimen. The crabapples are small, about olive sized, are dark purple in color, and ...
View full detailsWhite Pine Tree
Commonly called the Eastern White Pine- this soft needled evergreen tree is a common sight around the forests of the Great Lakes in North America. ...
View full detailsWickson Crabapple Tree
Bred on the farm of Albert Etter, a Californian Pomologist, in Northern California in 1947. Etter is famous for his cultivation of red fleshed appl...
View full detailsWinecrisp Apple Tree
The original seeding to yield the WineCrisp apple tree was first crossed in 1969 by L.F. Hough at Rutgers University; he used the unremarkably name...
View full detailsWinter Banana Apple Scionwood
For a lengthy history and description of the Winter Banana, please see its main apple page. Scionwood is ~10-12" long, at least ¼" in caliper, and ...
View full detailsWinter Banana Apple Tree
This Midwestern Heirloom apple was discovered on David Flory's orchard in the mid-1870s and became commercially available in 1890. The apple has tw...
View full detailsWolf River Apple Tree
This is an enormous apple. First discovered in 1875 along the Wolf River in Wisconsin- this apple soon became a popular baking apple because you on...
View full detailsYellow Delicious Apple Tree
A late October apple of superb fresh eating quality. The large golden-yellow apples have a snow-white, juicy, very sweet flesh. While best known fo...
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 detailsYellow Transparent Apple Tree
This apple was one of several cold hardy varieties imported from Russia to help with Western Expansion. In the 1870s, as Americans moved into colde...
View full detailsYork Elderberry Bush
The York Elderberry is bushier than other elderberry varieties. The plant is larger than other elderberry varieties and therefore can produce more ...
View full detailsZestar Apple Scionwood
For a lengthy history and description of the Zestar Apple, please see its main apple page. Scionwood is ~10-12" long, at least ¼" in caliper, and s...
View full detailsZestar Apple Tree
Introduced in 1999 by the University of Minnesota as another cold hardy apple. The Zestar, also called Minnewashta, is a cross between the State Fa...
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