This year is my first significant crop of Becton Pears. So far I can’t tell any difference between the look of Becton and Kieffer. I will try to watch the drop times. Beaton is supposed to be a little later.
I’ve had Galloway Pears before, but I don’t think I’ve posted pics of them in this thread. They are an Asian pear that resembles Olympic, but they don’t get nearly as big. I have a good crop of them this year.
This is an apple I’ve never posted before. I bought it as a late red apple but I think there was a mixup at the nursery. I now believe this tree to be a Northwest Greening. The apples on this tree are one of my favorites for drying. The tree is highly DR with zero FB over the years and very little leaf spotting. Apples are quite large (around 3.5 inches) and very clean.
I have two more pears for you. The first is Bartlett. When I started planting pears, I made the decision to stay away from Bartlett because of its reputation of being susceptible to fireblight. However, a few years ago when I bought some Kieffers, they sent one Bartlett by mistake.
That turned out to be an okay mistake. The tree is now mature and has never shown even a hint of fireblight. It is loaded this year and a few are beginning to ripen.
This next pear is Senator Clark. I have two of these and love them. Both have light crops this year, but they were loaded last year and the year before. Pears are big - some right at 4 inches.
I have what was sold to me as an Old Fashioned Winesap at the farm that has been a really good tree. I normally leave all of these apples for the deer, but this year they looked so good I brought home a few gallons. I will turn these into chips.
I have a lot of relatives, neighbors and church friends who love fruit. What we don’t use ourselves I give to them free of charge. It’s just something that I enjoy doing.
And of course, it also draws in the deer.
PS - a preview of Kieffer that will ripen in the fall. I have about 10 trees that look like this.
Last year I set a waist high Atago Pear tree and was surprised this spring to see that it had set fruit. I pulled all off except 2 pears, which grew well. Today they looked ripe so I tried one. The taste and crispiness blew me away. And when have you seen any fruit look so good without spraying.....
This pear is Moonglow. You can see the red blush starting to form on the fruit exposed to the sun. This blush increases as they ripen. The fruit would remind you of Kieffer and the drop time is close to Kieffer but a bit earlier. DR is bulletproof.
Just got through picking up a whole gallon of chestnuts below a medium sized early dropping tree. A tree 25 feet away the same size is loaded but hasn’t dropped a single nut yet.
Just a few minutes later, another quick gallon under a different tree. Dangerous to stand under this tree. That’s all I need. The deer can have the rest.