Same, I put the apple straight in the dirt. People be doing the most. UA-camrs use to tell you to refrigerate strawberries seeds. All I did was just put that in the dirt as well.
Your apple was probably already in your fridge or was stored in a cold place before you purchased it. Since it already went through that stratification process and has broken out of its dormancy, your apple seed is able to sprout easily. A few weeks ago i cut open an apple one of the seeds sprouted inside the apple so all i had to do was plant it outside. Now i have a tiny apple tree lol
thanks for posting ! question, so if I need to store pear seeds for a few months in my condo until I plant them at the family cottage in spring ---Can I put them in a glass container in the fridge after they dry out for a few days? and they need to be wrapped in paper towel? (not moist)
Bit of confusion going on here. Grafting has nothing to do with what the subsequent fruit is like. Grafting is taking a scion (cutting) from one plant and attaching it to a rootstock in such a way as the scion will grow. The normal reason is to get some growing attribute of the rootstock (dwarfing, disease resistance) while growing essentially a clone of a known variety. In fact one can even graft multiple cultivars (varieties) of an apple, or pear or even in some cases different fruit on one rootstock (I have one tree, that has both peach and plum growing from the same rootstock.. and yes they are producing) The reason the fruit of a tree, grown from seed may (and likely will ) be different is because of cross pollination. Just as a human child is different from the mother and father due to the mixing of genes (and every child from the same parent is different, unless identical twins). For example, from Wikipedia: "The Granny Smith is a tip-bearing apple cultivar, which originated in Australia in 1868.[1] It is named after Maria Ann Smith, who propagated the cultivar from a chance seedling. The tree is thought to be a hybrid of Malus sylvestris, the European wild apple, with the Domesticated apple Malus pumila as the polleniser." Thus planting seeds of a granny smith apple, should the germinate and grow to production, you will get apples (if pollinated) but they may be similar to the one you ate, but more likely something different and closer to one of the parents. Plant 10 seeds from the same apple and each may be different. This has absolutely nothing.. NOTHING to do with grafting. Two completely different types of propagation.. Sexual (flowers, pollination, seed [plants] or ovulation, copulation, fertilization, baby [animal]) versus vegetative.. (grafts, cloning, division...) Basic Jr high biology.
@BillyBob People don't normally buy apple seeds, unless they are growing the trees to feed wildlife or to supply wood for smoking meats (good for bacon, at least). The variability in apple seeds will include many throwbacks to a crabapple ancestor (recessive genes?) and is less predictable even than say pawpaws or plums, where the offspring resemble some combination of the traits of the male and female parent (BTW, if you buy a fruit, you have no idea what the male/pollen parent was). Heirloom tomatoes are chosen for flavor, usually, though a landrace like the "Everglades tomato" might be chosen for its ability to succeed in a difficult climate. Annual vegetables like tomatoes have a generation of a year or less, so breeding is rapid, and many people continue to breed the F2+ generations until the crop has essentially become stable (& inbred), so that you will always get a Cherokee Purple tomato from Cherokee Purple seeds. If you prevent cross pollination from other varieties, you can save seeds year after year from the fruit you grow. Commercial tomatoes often use hybrid seeds because the plants are typically more productive due to lower inbreeding ("hybrid vigor"). You can't save seeds from those and get the same variety, since you are essentially making an F2 generation (Mendel's terms), allowing recessive traits to show up, good or bad.
A seed may have been fertilized by pollen from a different variety's flower and thus be a hybrid. Some apple varieties are not even self-fertile; you need to plant them close enough to a different variety for them to set fruit.
You won't need to stratify (refrigerate) Citrus seeds (aside from probably Poncirus trifoliata), since they come from climates that essentially lack winter.
I put lemon seeds in soil and kept it moist. Every seed I put germinated giving me 5 lemon trees. All are still growing well but I gave 2 of them away.
HI..thank u for your video.Do the seeds have to be refriedgerated for a month..or at all? Ive seen other videos about germinating the seeds in a wet paper towel, in a warm temp.It is confusing why they need to be refridgerated if they actually germinate in a mosit, warm temp in 2 days...?? Thanks for info!!
It depends on what kind of plant it is. Some annual vegetables don't need to go through this cold process (which mimics a winter) at all, especially tropical plants as. .well, if they needed a month of below 30 degree (F) weather to germinate, they would go extinct as in many parts of the tropics, that never happens. Others. may need even longer period of stratification (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratification_(seeds) )
In general, no. If you plant seeds from a low chill variety like Anna or Dorsett Golden, you are more likely to get plants adapted to warm climates. Virtually no low chill varieties are sold at the groceries where I live.
To germinate, sure! You can put several in one pot (saves space and you can see how many actually germinate), however once they sprout and have a leaf or two, I'd go ahead and separate them into different pots. Being trees, try to get as deep a pot as possible, or better yet, research each type of tree (pear, apple, plum, peach..) specifically for root spread pattern. Some have tap roots, so you need pots that are deeper than wide, some have surface roots, so more important to have wider pot vs deep. When in doubt.. just go big in both directions. If.. you are putting in a pot and plan to later transplant to the ground.. look for square pots over round. Roots in a round pot tend to start going in circles.. once transplanted this can slow down root expansion. The sharp corners of a square pot will have a better chance of directing the roots down when they hit a corner, rather than just going round and round (the roots of the tree go round and round.. round and round.. I'll shut up now)
@@hasaan2015 as in cross pollinate between an apple and pear? There may be some very rare ones that could (I never say never), and nature sometimes throws a screwball, but in general, no cross species pollination occurs, without purposefully tinkering (Gene splicing aka GMO).
You lose the benefits of dwarfing or specific disease resistances that you can get from a clonal rootstock (though the full sized Antonovka apple rootstock comes pretty true from seed, so there are occasional exceptions). Pear veneer is quite pretty and useful in marquetry, so if you live beyond the normal range of fireblight, I could see growing seedling pears for timber, harvesting windfall fruit for perry ("cider" from pears) and/or vinegar, while waiting for the tree to get big enough to harvest. That is, if you are young or know that your kids will live on the same property after you (kinda rare in the USA today). It is a good skill to have for breeding new fruit, but I certainly wouldn't use any of the garbage that makes it to my local grocer for breeding. (I want disease resistance, heirloom flavors, and perhaps quirky traits like red flesh [which correlates with pink blossoms, reddish new leaves, and sometimes red fall color in apples, therefore good for edible landscaping]). With both apples and pears, the chance of good offspring from good parents is surprisingly low, so the prospective breeder will need to plant many seeds. Again, best to start in your teens or twenties (& young people can certainly afford land, yeah right).
My seeds apple and pears all germinated so happy with the results and the method i followed on your video😍
I did just that and as we are talking I have about 17 apple 🍏 trees in my garden.
I have apple juice in my fridge
I'm growing apples and pears your way in Costa Rica, even that there is tropical weather...
Thanks for the video
Barlette Pears are the greatest. My Dad was 3rd cousins to the Barlette Sisters.
I put it straight in the dirt and it grew very nice.
Edit: the pear tree is about 3 inches and it has like 8 leafes
@Noah Tunnell a few weeks
Same, I put the apple straight in the dirt. People be doing the most. UA-camrs use to tell you to refrigerate strawberries seeds. All I did was just put that in the dirt as well.
you don't have to put them in the fridge, I just planted them in a small pot, and it sprouted super easy.
Your apple was probably already in your fridge or was stored in a cold place before you purchased it. Since it already went through that stratification process and has broken out of its dormancy, your apple seed is able to sprout easily. A few weeks ago i cut open an apple one of the seeds sprouted inside the apple so all i had to do was plant it outside. Now i have a tiny apple tree lol
Колин same happened to me but with a papaya, with 5 total.
@@benlego8273 What kind of apple was that?
It’s very Nice. I love pears😍
Best video I've found on this topic, thank you.
thanks for posting ! question, so if I need to store pear seeds for a few months in my condo until I plant them at the family cottage in spring ---Can I put them in a glass container in the fridge after they dry out for a few days? and they need to be wrapped in paper towel? (not moist)
thank you my singh brother
Bit of confusion going on here. Grafting has nothing to do with what the subsequent fruit is like. Grafting is taking a scion (cutting) from one plant and attaching it to a rootstock in such a way as the scion will grow. The normal reason is to get some growing attribute of the rootstock (dwarfing, disease resistance) while growing essentially a clone of a known variety. In fact one can even graft multiple cultivars (varieties) of an apple, or pear or even in some cases different fruit on one rootstock (I have one tree, that has both peach and plum growing from the same rootstock.. and yes they are producing)
The reason the fruit of a tree, grown from seed may (and likely will ) be different is because of cross pollination. Just as a human child is different from the mother and father due to the mixing of genes (and every child from the same parent is different, unless identical twins).
For example, from Wikipedia: "The Granny Smith is a tip-bearing apple cultivar, which originated in Australia in 1868.[1] It is named after Maria Ann Smith, who propagated the cultivar from a chance seedling. The tree is thought to be a hybrid of Malus sylvestris, the European wild apple, with the Domesticated apple Malus pumila as the polleniser."
Thus planting seeds of a granny smith apple, should the germinate and grow to production, you will get apples (if pollinated) but they may be similar to the one you ate, but more likely something different and closer to one of the parents. Plant 10 seeds from the same apple and each may be different. This has absolutely nothing.. NOTHING to do with grafting.
Two completely different types of propagation.. Sexual (flowers, pollination, seed [plants] or ovulation, copulation, fertilization, baby [animal]) versus vegetative.. (grafts, cloning, division...)
Basic Jr high biology.
@BillyBob People don't normally buy apple seeds, unless they are growing the trees to feed wildlife or to supply wood for smoking meats (good for bacon, at least). The variability in apple seeds will include many throwbacks to a crabapple ancestor (recessive genes?) and is less predictable even than say pawpaws or plums, where the offspring resemble some combination of the traits of the male and female parent (BTW, if you buy a fruit, you have no idea what the male/pollen parent was).
Heirloom tomatoes are chosen for flavor, usually, though a landrace like the "Everglades tomato" might be chosen for its ability to succeed in a difficult climate. Annual vegetables like tomatoes have a generation of a year or less, so breeding is rapid, and many people continue to breed the F2+ generations until the crop has essentially become stable (& inbred), so that you will always get a Cherokee Purple tomato from Cherokee Purple seeds. If you prevent cross pollination from other varieties, you can save seeds year after year from the fruit you grow. Commercial tomatoes often use hybrid seeds because the plants are typically more productive due to lower inbreeding ("hybrid vigor"). You can't save seeds from those and get the same variety, since you are essentially making an F2 generation (Mendel's terms), allowing recessive traits to show up, good or bad.
Thank you because I have some pears seeds also can you tell us how to grow pepper tree from f
Peppercorn
Hi jag, great video as usual. Will the gala apples grow in the tropics?? I'd love to try it but I live in Trinidad and that's in the west Indies.
I live in Trinidad and I know someone who has a big apple tree and I myself have had several small plants until a retarded cut my yard...do try
I can't speak for fruiting part but as for the tree growth it works... definitely try it...my friend has a big one and mine are still small for now
@@steffmac3700 are you from tunapuna by chance
@@elizabethgumbs3002 nope
teach us about mulberries, too. thank you
I literally put an apple core in a pot and watered it, and 6 months later I have a tree sapling
Hello! could you explain why it won't taste the same? Thanks!
A seed may have been fertilized by pollen from a different variety's flower and thus be a hybrid. Some apple varieties are not even self-fertile; you need to plant them close enough to a different variety for them to set fruit.
Have you done the same with Zesty fruits?
I've always loved they way Lemon tress looked.
You won't need to stratify (refrigerate) Citrus seeds (aside from probably Poncirus trifoliata), since they come from climates that essentially lack winter.
@@Erewhon2024 Thank you so much.
I put lemon seeds in soil and kept it moist. Every seed I put germinated giving me 5 lemon trees. All are still growing well but I gave 2 of them away.
Thanks for the video so nice
Thank You
HI..thank u for your video.Do the seeds have to be refriedgerated for a month..or at all? Ive seen other videos about germinating the seeds in a wet paper towel, in a warm temp.It is confusing why they need to be refridgerated if they actually germinate in a mosit, warm temp in 2 days...?? Thanks for info!!
It depends on what kind of plant it is. Some annual vegetables don't need to go through this cold process (which mimics a winter) at all, especially tropical plants as. .well, if they needed a month of below 30 degree (F) weather to germinate, they would go extinct as in many parts of the tropics, that never happens. Others. may need even longer period of stratification (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratification_(seeds) )
If any soil is ok to grow apple
Ty for your videos
Will the plant survive in High temperate areas with this Method
In general, no. If you plant seeds from a low chill variety like Anna or Dorsett Golden, you are more likely to get plants adapted to warm climates. Virtually no low chill varieties are sold at the groceries where I live.
Why does my apple tree seedling grow a pair of leaves every week?
How do ypu make your soil? Please reply! !!!
He made a video for that.
Do you grow avocado?
Yes, I am growing avocado from seed right now, will post a video in few weeks.
@@DaisyCreekFarms how long it take plant to give fruit?..i heard 10 or more years
Witch month we can grow
Can i plant apple and pear seedlings in the same pot
To germinate, sure! You can put several in one pot (saves space and you can see how many actually germinate), however once they sprout and have a leaf or two, I'd go ahead and separate them into different pots. Being trees, try to get as deep a pot as possible, or better yet, research each type of tree (pear, apple, plum, peach..) specifically for root spread pattern. Some have tap roots, so you need pots that are deeper than wide, some have surface roots, so more important to have wider pot vs deep. When in doubt.. just go big in both directions. If.. you are putting in a pot and plan to later transplant to the ground.. look for square pots over round. Roots in a round pot tend to start going in circles.. once transplanted this can slow down root expansion. The sharp corners of a square pot will have a better chance of directing the roots down when they hit a corner, rather than just going round and round (the roots of the tree go round and round.. round and round.. I'll shut up now)
@@HippocratesGarden I wanted to know what will happen if I let them grow. Will they mix?
@@hasaan2015 as in cross pollinate between an apple and pear? There may be some very rare ones that could (I never say never), and nature sometimes throws a screwball, but in general, no cross species pollination occurs, without purposefully tinkering (Gene splicing aka GMO).
@@HippocratesGarden Thanks for the info. My Pear plant already began sprouting. How long will it be before it becomes a tree
Why the sprout of apple seed is drying
My tree grew for 1 week more than yours in 1 month
You lose the benefits of dwarfing or specific disease resistances that you can get from a clonal rootstock (though the full sized Antonovka apple rootstock comes pretty true from seed, so there are occasional exceptions). Pear veneer is quite pretty and useful in marquetry, so if you live beyond the normal range of fireblight, I could see growing seedling pears for timber, harvesting windfall fruit for perry ("cider" from pears) and/or vinegar, while waiting for the tree to get big enough to harvest. That is, if you are young or know that your kids will live on the same property after you (kinda rare in the USA today).
It is a good skill to have for breeding new fruit, but I certainly wouldn't use any of the garbage that makes it to my local grocer for breeding. (I want disease resistance, heirloom flavors, and perhaps quirky traits like red flesh [which correlates with pink blossoms, reddish new leaves, and sometimes red fall color in apples, therefore good for edible landscaping]). With both apples and pears, the chance of good offspring from good parents is surprisingly low, so the prospective breeder will need to plant many seeds. Again, best to start in your teens or twenties (& young people can certainly afford land, yeah right).
Eeeeeee-
I choose the Japanese one.
Thnks
Hi
Could you put subscribe in video 🙏
2 months is too long
Video make in hindi ap kya angresh ho
What's your english accent? 😂
Ty for your videos