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01/09/2025
The common fruit trees of Europe, whether with pips like apples or with stones like plums, have flowers with male and female parts.
For fruit to form, the female part (pistil) must receive pollen from the male part (stamen).
A self fertile fruit tree can use its own pollen (with varying degrees of success), but most trees require the pollen from a different and compatible variety of the same species.
e.g. a Discovery apple can be pollinated by other apples that are in flower at the same time, but not by other Discovery apples, nor by a different fruit specis like pears or cherries.
Trees will cross-pollinate with other trees in their own group and adjacent groups, e.g. a tree in Pollination Group C will cross-pollinate with trees (of the same species) in groups B, C, and D.
The letters can be replaced with numbers, so Group C is the same as Group 3.
There are 3 types of fruit tree fertility:
On rare occasion, two specific fruit trees are too closely related to be compatible: our pollination tool takes this into account.
In over 75% of the UK, you will have compatible trees already in your neighbourhood, especially when you consider that most crab apples pollinate orchard apples, and wild cherries (gean) pollinate sweet cherries (ornamental cherries, however, generally do not).
The main places where pollination is an issue are remote and windy, typically surrounded by forestry or livestock with few gardens or orchards.
First, have a look around your neighbourhood to see what is growing locally, and ask your neighbours with fruit trees which varieties they have. If that doesn’t help, then definitely choose a self-fertile tree.
Bees and other insects carry pollen between flowers: even self-fertile trees need them to move their own pollen around their flowers, so an orchard is an ideal place for a beehive, and to encourage wild bees.
In exposed, windy locations, or at high altitude above about 800ft, bees find it hard to fly, so it is even more important to provide habitats and windbreaks to help them out; also, it’s best to stick to reliably self-fertile varieties that make the most of limited pollinators.
The closer they are, the better, but anything within 500 feet / 150 metres should be fine.
No, one species of fruit tree cannot pollinate a different species.
One variety of apple can pollinate other apple varieties, but not pears or cherries or anything else.