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Tydemans Late Orange Apple (Malus domestica Tydemans Late Orange) 1Tydemans Late Orange Apple (Malus domestica Tydemans Late Orange) 1

Tydemans Late Orange Apple Trees

Malus domestica Tydemans Late OrangePlant guarantee for 1 yearFeefo logo

The details

  • Eating: Tangy and Sweet
  • Spur bearer
  • Self sterile.
  • Pollinator
  • Pollination Group D.
  • Harvesting: October.
  • Stores 1 - 2 months.
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Description

Malus Tydemans Late Orange - Mid Season

Description of Tydemans Late Orange Trees & Fruit:
A Tydeman's Late Orange apple has a lovely crackled colouration of purplish orange red over pale yellow-green.
The green-white flesh has a lip smacking flavour and crisp texture.
They will store for ages, becoming sweeter and less sharp, but still very tasty. An excellent alternative to Coxs.
The flowers are both pretty and frost resistant.
The trees are vigorous and will need attentive pruning when they are young to keep them in shape.
Although they are a hardy tree, they are not recommended for windy sites, as their fruiting spurs are quite brittle.

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

Characteristics of Tydemans Late Orange Trees:

  • Sharp, refreshing little eating apple.
  • Heavy cropper.
  • Spur Bearer: suitable for cordons & training on wires.
  • Hardy, frost resistant tree - suitable for harsh Northern & Scottish areas.
  • Harvest: Mid-October
  • Store & ripen in a cool, dry place: 6 months / until end of April. Best flavour comes after 3-4 weeks storage.

Growing Tydemans Late Orange 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. Tydemans Late Orange is a very hardy tree, but we don't recommend it for exposed, windy sites.

Tydemans Late Orange Disease resistance notes:
Resistant to Scab but very susceptible to Mildew & Fireblight, so it's not recommended for the organic grower.

Pollination Partners for Tydemans Late Orange:
Your trees are in Group D.
This means that they will cross-pollinate with:

  • All trees in Group D.
  • Trees in Group C and trees in Group E.

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 Tydemans Late Orange:
Bred from Cox's Orange Pippin and Laxton's Superb by Mr Tydeman of the East Malling Research Station in the 1930s. It was released commercially in 1949.

Has won the RHS award of garden merit.