I have two Kanzi trees – when will they bear fruit?

Hello,

I grew two trees from seeds of different Kanzi apples. One is 1.5 meters tall (it had aphids), the other is already 2.5 meters tall.

When do they usually wear them?

(Yes, I know they are not true to seed).

kind regards

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BerndBauer3
2 years ago

You can often go by age rather than by size. 8 – 10 years it may take. A few apples can come earlier. When the tree blossoms, it can theoretically also bear fruit.

Pomophilus
2 years ago

Hello,

In apple seedlings, not only do the characteristics of the two parents of the mother tree, ie in your case of 'Kanzi', the parents are 'Gala' and 'Braeburn', but also those of the pollinator in the same way. And we don't even know who the pollinant was!!

And each individual from the same intersection will be a unique new combination of the genes of the parents. You had to create a lot of seedlings from the 'Gala' and 'Braeburn' crossing, until at last something usable like 'Kanzi' came out, if it were easier, then the whole effort with the club type would not be worth it. And therefore I mean, the properties of your seedlings from 'Kanzi' will be completely unpredictable. I mean, you can't say how the "usually" fails.

https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicoter

BerndBauer3
2 years ago
Reply to  Pomophilus

Often, ornamental apples are also used for pollination.

Pomophilus
2 years ago
Reply to  BerndBauer3

Usually nothing is used in the garden, but the blossom spontaneously, of course, pollinated by insects, with something that happens to be nearby. Yeah, that can be a pineapple.

Pomophilus
2 years ago
Reply to  Pomophilus

Okay, who can read is clearly in the advantage! I had believed you wanted to know how they will wear, how the fruits fall, how they look, how they taste.

When it comes to the time when the first fruits could appear, I would start from at least 10 years. Planted apple balms on seedlings support carry about 10 years after planting. But at planting they are already a few years old!

Pomophilus
2 years ago

Yeah, you're right, probably the cores of bought apples. I know a commercial apple plantation. Apples are known to be almost always self-infertile, so a blossom can hardly fertilize one on their flowering of the same tree as a blossom of another tree of the same variety. Therefore, the varieties are mixed in series in this plant. On the left and right of 'Kanzi' there were a number of different varieties, only a few rows would go on 'Kanzi' again. T he pollination takes place on the natural way, there is always a pollinating tree of another variety in the immediate vicinity. We do not know, of course, whether the respective flower has been pollinated from row to right or to the left, or perhaps from one tree two or three rows, and we do not know whether two purchased apples originate from the same plant or from two with very different variety combinations. There, in the plant I know, there are no ornaments. It is possible to plant a few of them elsewhere to increase pollination safety. Even without ornaments, they have the problem that too many pollinated flowers want to ripen fruit. They must thin out there, remove some of the fruit batches, so that the resources do not flow into too much fruit, so the remaining fruits do not remain too small for the market. This happens in the first passage chemically, through a special poison all the flowers are killed, which are just at a certain stage. Thereafter, part of the fruit batches is manually removed for fine control. Not my kind of fruit production…

BerndBauer3
2 years ago

I was thinking about apples from the store that came from plantations.

turnmami
2 years ago

My apple trees were full after 10 years.

Always a few individual apples

However, I have other varieties

Alexandra1410
2 years ago

You pulled a base, not the variety. If there are fruits, then wild apples