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  2. How to Prune an Apple Tree So It Produces Fruit for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/prune-apple-tree-produces-fruit...

    Pruning apple trees encourages growth and prevents reduces the risk of disease. ... The best time to prune an apple tree is during late winter or early spring after the fruit has been harvested ...

  3. Late winter is the perfect time to trim apple trees. Tips to ...

    www.aol.com/winter-perfect-time-trim-apple...

    Pruning apple trees in late winter can pay off with a bumper crop. Late winter is the time to get out and give these old trees a hand. This wintertime work bears fruit and helps wildlife. As a ...

  4. Should You Keep Watering Your Trees in Winter? What ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-watering-trees-winter-gardeners...

    Trees with shallow root systems. In warmer climates where the soil may not stay frozen all winter, shallow-rooted trees such as dogwood, redbud, and Japanese maple are vulnerable to damage from ...

  5. Antonovka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonovka

    Antonovka apples. Antonovka is a cultivar of vernacular selection, which began to spread from the region of Kursk in Russia during the 19th century. [4] While the fruit-bearing trees have not received a wide degree of recognition outside the former Soviet Union, many nurseries do use Antonovka rootstocks, since they impart a degree of winter-hardiness to the grafted varieties.

  6. Roxbury Russet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roxbury_Russet

    The historic Shirley-Eustis House museum in Roxbury, Massachusetts, was planted in 1993 with five 'Roxbury Russet' apple trees. [11] Verellen Orchard in Romeo, Michigan grows Roxbury Russett apples, available at their road-side farm stand. Other orchards include the following: Applebrook Farm, Broad Brook, CT; The Apple Farm—Bates & Schmitt ...

  7. Winesap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winesap

    They called the apple wine-sop and it was said to have a "sweet, but not sprightly taste". [6] Coxe described it [5] and provided an illustration in his 1817 book, A View of the Cultivation of Fruit Trees. [7] Coxe and other authors mention its use for cider. [8] [5] Winesap was a popular apple in the United States until the 1950s.