Apples from seed
Johnny appleseed didn't know that I guess.
"Frogleg" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 13:42:28 +0100, "Jette Randlov"
wrote:
Have anybody tried it? I am wondering if you save seeds from apples grown
in
a normal garden, the seeds will likely be cross pollinated and the
offspring
F1 - so theoretically the offspring should give fairly healthy, large
apples. The taste cannot be guessed
Apples are propagated by grafting, not seeds.
I keep hearing people saying that the new tree is highly unlikely to
produce
good/eatable/normal apples. Is that really true?
It is true, and rather than being "highly unlikely" for a seed-grown
tree to produce edible apples, the chances are infinitessimally small.
"The Botany of Desire" by Michael Pollan was a best seller in the US a
few years ago, and has an extensive section on the habits and history
of apples.
Would it be worth trying just as a fun experiment? If the offspring is
interesting one could graft it on some existing tree.
Of course it'd be a fun experiment. Keep in mind that you're going to
have to wait 3-5 years for fruit (and you need 2 trees for
pollination).
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