Bramley’s Seedling

Bramley’s Seedling          

Cooker. Raised by Mr Bramley and planted by  Miss Brailsford in her garden in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, during the Napoleonic war. Introduced by Merryweather of Southwell in c1876.

A large culinary apple, very rich in vitamin C.  Very widely planted for commercial cultivation. Must be on a dwarfing stock or it will fill your garden!

Large, spreading tree; tip bearer; Triploid. Must have two pollinators!

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Bramley

Bramley

Bloody Ploughman

Bloody Ploughman

Bloody Ploughman

Eater. Raised by Storrie of Glencarse , Perthshire, before 1883.  Blood red, flesh containing pink streaks when ripe.

Several stories of its origin: one, that a ploughman was shot by a gamekeeper on the Megginch estate, while he was scrumping.  His wife threw the bag of apples on a rubbish heap, and several seedlings grew, the first of this variety. There is a green and red clone of this, we, of course, only sell the blood red clone!

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Belle de Boskoop

Belle De Boskoop

Belle de Boskoop

Eater & cooker. Discovered in the nursery district of Boskoop near Gouda , Netherlands, in 1856 by K J W Ottolander.  Widely grown in Holland, Germany & Belgium. Award of merit, RHS, in 1897.  You can buy it in the markets of France and Belgium. My young cordon has given me a bucketful of delicious, large, firm, and  juicy fruit every year so far. It’s a lovely apple, maybe it should be more widely grown?

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