Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Blossoming ideas
Country Life UK
|March 22, 2023
There's crab-apple jelly, of course, but ornamental apple trees offer so much more: they're easy to grow, have beautiful flowers that last longer than those on Japanese cherries and there's one to suit every garden, says Charles Quest-Ritson
WHEN people talk about 'crab apples', they usually mean those ornamental trees glistening with little fruit from which they make delicious jams and jellies in autumn. But all those apples start off as flowers and many of the trees that bear them are equally as attractive when they bloom in springand often even more so.
Botanists have a name for our native crab apple-Malus sylvestris-but it is seldom grown by gardeners. Most of the ornamental garden varieties are species, forms or hybrids from Asia and North America. There are some 40 wild species and hundreds of horticultural selections, all from the northern hemisphere, and immensely variable in their size, shape and beauty. Nurserymen tell us that there is 'a crab apple for every garden'.
All apples belong to the genus Malus and are easy to grow. They are not fussy about soil they fare well in chalk-and they do better in full sun than shade. Good drainage is important because, like most trees, they do not grow well in boggy conditions. A couple of American species-M. coronaria and M. ioensis prefer acid soil, but, in general, ornamental apples are easy-going, reliable small trees for gardens of all sizes.
Bu hikaye Country Life UK dergisinin March 22, 2023 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Country Life UK'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Country Life UK
A view through the woods
THIS superb book is not, as the title might suggest, a straightforward natural history of Russia’s dominant biome, which, as its author reminds us, is equal in importance and far greater in extent than the Amazonian rainforest.
6 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
The tragedy then the triumph
Verdi's dramatic operas are among the most popular, but grief nearly halted his output and the Italian composer and countryman only returned to creativity after finding solace on his farm
3 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
Take a leaf
Add charm to winter months with jewellery inspired by Nature
1 min
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
Big Brother and the badgers
I ONCE spent several miserable hours up a tree waiting for some badgers to emerge from their sett.
2 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
Does culture have pride of place?
AS Athena went to press, the Government announced a package of $1.5 billion capital spending ‘to restore national pride’.
2 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
An inspector calls
AGROMENES has a new hero.
2 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
A study in scarlet
One hundred years ago, the first all-red telephone box, designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, was installed in London. Deborah Nicholls-Lee lifts the receiver on a very British icon
5 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
Having a wild time
BACK in 1994, I made a big mistake when I decided not to attend a conference titled Perennial Perspectives at Kew.
3 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
Offaly good
Forget fillet and pass on plastic-wrapped cuts: taking a nose-to-tail approach to dining offers the ultimate in magnificent, fully immersive eating, advocates
5 mins
January 28, 2026
Country Life UK
A ghost in the gloaming
The spectral emergence of a barn owl, silently drifting across the sky at dusk, is one of Britain's most magical sights. We must treasure their dwindling numbers
3 mins
January 28, 2026
Translate
Change font size
