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Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company
Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling | The Jonsteen Company

Common Apple | Medium Tree Seedling

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Temporarily out of stock
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$18.99
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Malus pumila

  • Grow your own Common Apple, a lovely wild tree and the most widely grown apple species in the world
  • 100% guaranteed
  • Seed-grown on California's Redwood Coast
  • Transplanting and care instructions included


Water Needs | The Jonsteen Company
Moisture
Medium
Cold Hardiness | The Jonsteen Company Cold Hardiness
-40°F
Light Needs | The Jonsteen Company Light
Full Sun / Partial Shade
Size | The Jonsteen Company Size
5 – 30' tall / 5 – 30' spread
Age | The Jonsteen Company Lifespan
 50 yrs
Growth Rate | The Jonsteen Company Growth Rate
Medium
Drought Tolerance | The Jonsteen Company Drought Tolerance
Low
Windfirm | The Jonsteen Company Wind Resistance
Medium

About Malus pumila

Apple trees have been cherished and cultivated for thousands of years by people of many cultures from every corner of the world.

The “common” apple tree, as we know it today, is a species known as Malus domestica or, synonymously, Malus pumila. This tree comes from a wild ancestor, Malus sieversii, that grows in the mountains of Central Asia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and northwestern China.

The amazing and generous apple tree has been one of humanity’s favorite trees — growing alongside us throughout most of recorded history. It was perhaps 10,000 years ago that farmers in the mountains of Asia first began growing and “domesticating” apple trees. From there, merchants transported apple trees and apple seeds along the legendary overland and maritime Silk Road trade routes into Europe and throughout the Western World. Greeks grew apple trees, as did the Romans after them, and long before the close of the First Century A.D., the beloved apple tree was dispersed to the far reaches of the known world.

Centuries later, colonists, bringing seeds from Europe, introduced apple trees to the North American continent. By the early 1600’s, North America’s first recorded apple orchard had been planted in Boston, and by the mid-17th Century, apple orchards were proliferating along American trade routes and on colonial farms. These early apple orchards were planted primarily to support cider production. North American colonists deemed apple cider safer to consume than water, and adopted it as the national drink. Consequently, cider became a highly valued and heavily traded commodity, and production of cider became foundational to the colonial economy. Apples fit for eating (sweet and fine-textured and delicious, as we know them today) were not reliably produced in these early orchards. Tasty and valuable apple cider, however, could be counted on.

In modern times, the fruit and nursery industry has greatly colored people’s perception of apples and apple trees. Most apples in early America did not taste great. They were not particularly appetizing to look at either, appearing in odd sizes and shapes with inconsistently colored, often rough and russetted skin. Nowhere were the Gravensteins, Granny Smiths, Jonathans, Red Delicious, Honeycrisps, Pink Ladies, Galas, and Fujis so ubiquitous today. These well-known and loved modern apple varieties are all produced from trees sequestered by fruit farmers and reproduced using vegetative propagation and grafting to ensure perfect genetic consistency. Seed-grown apple trees will not produce a predictably delicious fruit. When apple growers in Washington State developed their multi-billion dollar fruit industry in the 20th Century, all the trees they used were carefully grafted cultivars of tried and true apple varieties with precisely known fruiting characteristics.

After thousands of years of cross-pollination, today’s seed-grown apple trees are genetically more related to crabapples than their wild ancestors. Apple trees are members of the rose family, and are generally small- to medium-sized trees which burst with lovely five-petaled white-to-pink blooms each spring and adorn themselves with ripening orbs of growing fruit throughout the summer. Apple trees are deciduous, losing their mid-sized serrated leaves each autumn. Apple trees typically grow to heights around 15 feet, but in the wild they can stretch to more than twice that height.  While they can live to more than 100 years of age, apple trees have a typical lifespan closer to 50 years.


About Jonsteen's Seedlings

All of our trees are seed-grown at our nursery on California's Redwood Coast, which is inspected monthly and licensed by the California Department of Agriculture. Trees can provide a natural barrier against high winds, temperatures, noise pollution and soil erosion, all while benefiting local air quality, wildlife and property values — a Jonsteen seedling will only grow in value and beauty


About Jonsteen's 100% Guarantee

All of our trees are guaranteed to arrive healthy and in good condition. If your tree perishes despite your honest efforts, we will be happy to replace it with a small-sized seedling for just the cost of shipping/handling. You can learn more about our guarantee and tree replacement policy here.


Seedling Size Chart: Medium

Due to the dynamic nature of actively growing trees, as well as the tremendous variation between species’ growth rates, we rely on the cubic volume of a seedling’s root mass to determine its “size” (Small / Medium / Large / XL). Within each size there is minor variance — the dimensions provided here represent the category minimum. If exact measurements are essential, please contact us about current stock.

Seedling Size Chart | Medium | The Jonsteen Company

Customer Reviews

Based on 2 reviews
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R
Richard

Good quality. So far so good.

A
Aj
Really small for a medium

The medium size of the apple tree Antonovka was really tiny. The overall height from the bottom of the roots to the very top of the leaves (total of 5 tiny leaves) is 10.5”. I can’t imagine what is the size of the size small plant.

Sorry, Aj. We're always bummed when our seedlings don't meet expectations. But this is a good opportunity to remind folks that our sizing is based on root development and age, not foliar height. Trees are incredibly dynamic, so if exact measurements are essential, we encourage you to contact us about current stock to avoid situations like this.