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Pyrus communis - Common Pear Trees

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Autumn Colour Hedging Cream White Edible Fruit / Nuts

 

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Bareroot                        

Bareroot and potted - what' s the difference?

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Wild Pear - Bareroot Sapling Trees

The Common Pear tree, Pyrus communis is a medium sized tree that makes an outstanding hedgerow plant; we think should be used a lot more! It flowers heavily in April when the leaves are still small and pale green, which all looks great together. The mature leaves are glossy, rich green. The small, edible fruit are popular with birds and squirrels, but if you can get your hands on them they are usually sweet and quite delicious - this is a wild tree, so the fruit will vary. If the pears aren't sweet when fresh, use them for jam. The autumn foliage is orange & gold and if you are clipping these plants as a hedge, the leaves will stay on the branches for some time. Although it isn't truly thorny, its short twigs have pointed ends.
You can buy proper eating & cooking pears here.

Growing Wild Pear Trees
These tough, hardy trees will grow just about anywhere in Britain, apart from chalky soil or salty sites by the sea. They will still look great when planted on poor quality soil; a yearly mulch of well rotted compost or manure is all they need to stay on top form. Mature plants are drought resistant.
Hedge Spacing: 3 plants per metre.
Your trees will grow to between 15-20 metres.

Uncultivated pears are also called Pyrus pyraster. The history of the common pear is hard to trace. There are records of a cultivated pear growing in the palace of Sennacherib at Nineveh, Iraq, in 700 BC (note, that is over 2000 years before Europeans started breeding modern pears). The common pear we have today is believed to be hybrid of more ancient European and Asian trees, but with all the cultivated pear seeds that have escaped from orchards over the centuries, it is impossible to tell apart the really wild pear trees and the rogue pears that have bred with their wild cousins. Pear breeding in Europe probably began in the 1500's, but the first proper records are from about 1610, written by Jean Robin, King Henri III's fruit tree gardener.