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Keswick Codlin Apple Trees

Key Data

Cooking Apple Trees Eating Apple Trees Apple Trees Cooking Eating

Early Fruiting Pollination Group B Spur Fruiting Pollinator

 

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Malus Keswick Codlin - Early Season

Description of Keswick Codlin Trees & Fruit:
Pronounced Keswick Codling in some parts, this is a nice dual purpose apple with a long, rather squashed shape and pale green-yellow colour.
When the fruit are well ripe, they are good to eat fresh: soft and juicy with an excellent sharp flavour - great with cheese or diced in a salad.
When cooked, it bakes into a nice soft puree.
The tree has plentiful, very fragrant flowers and is a great pollinator. It's quite fast growing and becomes a heavy cropper with time.

Browse all our apple trees here or read our guide to buying the right apple tree.

Characteristics of Keswick Codlin Trees:

  • Excellent cooking apple, also good for eating when well ripe.
  • Heavy cropper, some biennial habit.
  • Good for making apple jelly or crumble.
  • Partially Self-fertile.
  • Spur Bearer: suitable for cordons & training on wires.
  • Suitable for sheltered areas in the North and Scotland.
  • Harvest: Mid August through September.
  • Store & ripen in a cool, dry place: Doesn't store well.

Growing Keswick Codlin Apple Trees:
Rich soil is important - dig in plenty of good manure and compost before planting. Soil drainage must be good. The more sun your trees get the better your crops will be.

Keswick Codlin Disease resistance notes:
These trees are very resistant to scab, a common problem in damper, humid, western areas of the UK.

Pollination Partners for Keswick Codlin:
These trees are partially self fertile, so will always produce some fruit & are likely to crop well with only poor pollination.

Your trees are in Group B with a flower date of 5.
This means that they will cross-pollinate with:

  • All trees in Group B.
  • Trees in Group A with a flower date of 2,3 or 4.
  • Trees in Group C with a flower date of 8.

See our Guide to Apple Tree Pollination for more tips about pollination (it's really simple, we promise!) & a full list of partners.

History & Parentage of Keswick Codlin:
Said to be found growing in a rubbish heap, Mr John Sander of Keswick, in the Lake district, bagged it and put it on the market in1793.
Very common in Queen Victoria's day, this was one of so many apple trees that almost disappeared around WW2.

It is one of the parents of Early Victoria.

Codling / Codlin is a common old English name for green cooking apples.