Howgate Wonder
A dual purpose large apple with a good reputation in Scotland. Blenheim x Newton Wonder so very good parentage. Ready late October. Vigorous tree so best to buy on dwarfing stock.

A dual purpose large apple with a good reputation in Scotland. Blenheim x Newton Wonder so very good parentage. Ready late October. Vigorous tree so best to buy on dwarfing stock.

Eater. Raised in 1924 by Miss B Y Hood at Edzell, Angus. Very sweet, coarse, soft flesh, almost triangular on my young tree!
Produces strong thick branches. It’s so sweet, it tastes of aspartame!

Dual. Raised Scotland and catalogued 1780. Named after birthplace of the 16th Century Poet, Drummond.
Popular garden apple in England in 19th Century. Grown then in London and Kent. Handsome big fruit, Willie Duncan’s Favourite Scottish variety.
Our cordon does very well. Munch with cheese.

A good early cooker for Scotland. Much grown in the Clyde Valley. Tough and disease free large green apples.

We have several of these small weeping trees in neighbouring gardens.
They produce tons of codlin shaped dual purpose fruit, good for juicing too.

A very tough, round, clean, disease-free late cooker that does very well in Scotland.

Dual. UK Recorded in 1724. Strong brisk cidery taste. Rather dry tough white flesh.
Not in National Fruit Collection.

Eater. Raised 1923 by George Cave, Dovercourt, Essex.
Strong, sweet, sharp taste. Follows on from Beauty of Bath (q.v.) in late summer.
My favourite early eater for Scotland.

Cooker. Raised in Wigtown, Galloway. Noticed by RHS in 1871 and said to be old. Not a late keeper. May be eaten by those who like a sharp eater. Prolific producer in Perthshire.

One of the best eating apples for Scotland, my cordon producing lots of big healthy eating apples in October. Hardy and relatively scab resistant so tough enough for the west.