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Apple - Growing apples

A Wisdom Archive on Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Growing apples

A selection of articles related to Apple - Growing apples

We recommend this article: Apple - Growing apples - 1, and also this: Apple - Growing apples - 2.
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Apple, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Location, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Thinning, Nutritional information about the apple, Fruit tree propagation, Fruit tree pollination, Fruit tree forms, Cooking apple, Pruning fruit trees

ARTICLES RELATED TO Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Apple breeding. Like most perennial fruits, apples are ordinarily propagated asexually by grafting. Seedling apples are different from their parents, sometimes radically. Most new apple cultivars originate as seedlings, which either arise by chance or are bred by deliberately crossing cultivars with promising characteristics. The words seedling, pippin, and kernel in the name of an apple cultivar suggest that it originated as a seedling. Apples can also form bud sports (mutations on a ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples
Apple - Apple breeding. Like most perennial fruits, apples are ordinarily propagated asexually by grafting. Seedling apples are different from their parents, sometimes radically. Most new apple cultivars originate as seedlings, which either arise by chance or are bred by deliberately crossing cultivars with promising characteristics. The words seedling, pippin, and kernel in the name of an apple cultivar suggest that it originated as a seedling. Apples can also form bud sports (mutations on a ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia II - Apple II family - The family grows

Apple II family - Apple II Plus. The Apple II was eventually superseded by the Apple II Plus, which included the Applesoft BASIC programming language in ROM. This Microsoft-authored dialect of BASIC, which was previously available as an upgrade, supported floating-point arithmetic (albeit at a slower speed than Steve Wozniak's Integer BASIC) and became the standard BASIC dialect on the Apple. The Apple II Plus had a total of 48 kilobytes of RAM, expandable to 64 KB by means of the language card,< ...

See also:

Apple II family, Apple II family - History, Apple II family - The original Apple II, Apple II family - The family grows, Apple II family - Apple II Plus, Apple II family - Apple IIe, Apple II family - Apple IIc, Apple II family - Apple IIGS, Apple II family - Apple IIc Plus, Apple II family - Apple IIe Card, Apple II family - The Final Years, Apple II family - Clones, Apple II family - General, Apple II family - Apple II media, Apple II family - Different style renditions of the II name, Apple II family - Life after death, Apple II family - Industry impact

Read more here: » Apple II family: Encyclopedia II - Apple II family - The family grows

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Apple

The apple is a tree and its pomaceous fruit, of species Malus domestica in the family Rosaceae, and is one of the most widely cultivated tree fruits. It is a small deciduous tree reaching 5-12 m tall, with a broad, often densely twiggy crown. The leaves are alternately arranged, simple oval with an acute tip and serrated margin, slightly downy below, 5-12 cm long and 3-6 cm broad on a 2-5 cm petiole. The flowers are produced in spring with the leaves, white, usually tinged pink at first, 2.5-3.5 cm diameter, with five petals. T ...

Including:

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia - Apple

Apple - Growing apples: : Budding

Budding is a type of asexual reproduction. Budding - General biological meaning. A new organism is formed by the protrusion of part of another organism. When yeast buds, one cell becomes two cells. This is an example of reproduction. This is very common in plants, but may be found in animal organisms, such as the hydra, as well. Usually, the protrusion stays attached to the primary organism for a while, before becoming free. The new organism is naturally genetically identical to the primary one (a clone).Including:

  • Budding - General biological meaning
  • Budding - In Virology
  • Budding - In Embryology
  • Budding - In Horticulture
  • Budding - External link

Read more here: » Budding

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Apple II family

The Apple II, one of the very first personal computers, is widely seen as the founding pioneer and literal grandfather of the personal computer industry of today. As the direct descendant of the Apple I, it evolved from a meager hand-built computer kit intended for hobbyist, to a fully factory assembled machine ready-to-use out of the box most anyone could use. With its elegant case styling and simplicity (requiring just a television set as a display) it represented a computer that for the first time c ...

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Read more here: » Apple II family: Encyclopedia - Apple II family

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Apple mint

Apple mint (Mentha suaveolens, syn. M. rotundifolia) is a member of the mint genus Mentha that ranges through southern and western Europe and the western Mediterranean region. It is a herbaceous, upright perennial plant that is most commonly grown as a culinary herb and/or ground cover. It typically grows to 40-100 cm tall and spreads by rhizomes to form clonal colonies. The foliage is light green, with the sessile leaves being oblong to nearly ovate, 3-5 cm long and 2-4 cm broad. They are somewhat hairy on top and downy underneath with serrated edges. Apple mint has light purple-pi ...

Including:

Read more here: » Apple mint: Encyclopedia - Apple mint

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Bael

Bael (Aegle marmelos) is a fruit-bearing tree indigenous to India where it is popularly known as Bel, or Beli fruit, Bengal quince, Stone apple, or Wood apple. The tree, which is the only species in the genus Aegle, grows up to 15 meters tall and bears thorns and fragrant flowers. It has a woody-skinned, smooth fruit 5-15 cm in diameter. The skin of some forms of the fruit is so hard it must be cracked open with a hammer. It has numerous seeds, which are densely covered with fibrous hairs and are ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bael: Encyclopedia - Bael

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Amasya Province

Amasya is a province of Turkey, situated in the Black Sea Region to the north of the country. Its provincial capital is Amasya. It was called Amaesia in the first ages, and is mentioned in documents from the era of Alexander the Great. It was the birth place of the geographer and historian Strabo. Amasya is also known as the best apple growing province in the country and in Ottoman times was well known for its madrassas. It w ...

Including:

Read more here: » Amasya Province: Encyclopedia - Amasya Province

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - County Armagh

County Armagh (Contae Ard Mhacha in Irish) is a county in Ulster. It is one of the six counties that form Northern Ireland. County Armagh is known by some as the Orchard County because the land is so fertile for apple-growing. Its main town is Armagh, in the middle of the county, although Lurgan at the extreme north-east has a larger population. In Northern Ireland the county borders Lough Neagh to the north, County Down to the east and County Tyrone, and borders County Louth to the south and County Monaghan to the west, ...

Including:

Read more here: » County Armagh: Encyclopedia - County Armagh

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Malus

M. angustifolia - Southern Crab M. baccata - Siberian Crabapple M. bracteata M. brevipes M. coronaria - Sweet Crabapple M. domestica - Apple M. florentina M. floribunda - Japanese Crabapple M. formosana M. fusca - Oregon Crab M. glabrata M. glaucescens M. halliana M. honanensis M. hupehensis - Chinese Crabapple M. ioensis - Prairie Crab ...

Including:

Read more here: » Malus: Encyclopedia - Malus

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Angophora

See text Angophora is a genus of ten species of trees or large shrubs in to the myrtle family (Myrtaceae), native to eastern Australia. It is closely related to Corymbia and Eucalyptus, and all three are often referred to as "eucalypts". The differences are that Angophora have opposite leaves rather than alternate, and lack a bud cap or operculum. Angophora also has fruit with sharp ribs, while t ...

Read more here: » Angophora: Encyclopedia - Angophora

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Datura

see text Datura is a genus of herb and shrub plants belonging to the Solanaceae. Originally from the American continent, different species now grow throughout the globe. Some of them are now classified under the name Brugmansia; commonly called angel's trumpets, for their large (in some varieties up to 1 foot long) trumpet-shaped flowers. All members of the genus, under whichever name, contain the highly toxic anticholinergic alkaloids hyoscyamine, scopolamine, and atropine. One annual species ...

Including:

Read more here: » Datura: Encyclopedia - Datura

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Adam's apple

The human larynx rests in a frame of cartilage bound by ligaments and muscles. At the front is the thyroid cartilage, creating the lump at the front of the neck, known as the laryngeal prominence or more commonly as the Adam's apple. The etymology of the term "Adam's apple" is unclear: Webster's 1913 dictionary states that the term "... is so called from a notion that it was caused by the forbidden fruit, (an ...

Read more here: » Adam's apple: Encyclopedia - Adam's apple

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Apple scab

Apple scab is a disease of apple trees (genus Malus) caused by the ascomycete fungus Venturia inaequalis. The disease manifests as dull black or grey-brown lesions on the surface of tree leaves, buds or fruits. Lesions may also appear less frequently on the woody tissues of the tree. Fruits and the undersides of leaves are especially susceptible. The disease rarely kills its host, but can significantly reduce fruit yields and fruit quality. Affected fruits are less marketable ...

Including:

Read more here: » Apple scab: Encyclopedia - Apple scab

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Orchard

An orchard is an intentional planting of trees or shrubs maintained for food production. Most orchards comprise either fruit or nut-producing trees (see fruit trees), for commercial production. Orchards are also sometimes a feature of large gardens, where they serve an aesthetic as well as a productive purpose. Most temperate-zone orchards are laid out in a regular grid, with a grazed or mown grass or bare soil base that makes maintenance and fruit gathering easy. Orchards are often concentrated near bodies of water, where climactic extremes are moderated and blosso ...

Including:

Read more here: » Orchard: Encyclopedia - Orchard

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Atlas mythology

In Greek mythology, Atlas was a member of a race of giant gods known as Titans. Atlas mythology - Mythology. Atlas mythology - Kinship. Atlas was the son of the Titan Iapetos and the Oceanid Klymene. Atlas had three brothers — Prometheus, Epimetheus and Menoitios — and was the father of the Hesperides sisters, Maera, Hyas, the Hyades sisters, Kalypso and the Pleiades sisters. Atlas mythology - Punishment. Atlas led the Titans in one of the ...

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Read more here: » Atlas mythology: Encyclopedia - Atlas mythology

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Acerola

Acerola (Malpighia glabra), also known as Barbados Cherry or Wild Crapemyrtle, is a tropical fruit-bearing shrub or small tree in the family Malpighiaceae, native to the West Indies and northern South America. It grows to 3 m tall, with a dense, thorny crown. The leaves are evergreen, simple ovate-lanceolate, 5-10 cm long, with an entire margin. The flowers are produced in umbels of 2-5 together, each flower 1- ...

Including:

Read more here: » Acerola: Encyclopedia - Acerola

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Apple Newton

The Apple Newton, or simply Newton, was an early line of personal digital assistants developed, manufactured and marketed by Apple Computer from 1993 to 1998. The original Newtons were based on the ARM 610 RISC processor, and featured handwriting recognition. Apple's official name for the device was MessagePad; the term Newton was Apple's name for the operating system it used, but popular usage of the word Newton has grown to include the device and its software together. Apple Newton - The New ...

Including:

Read more here: » Apple Newton: Encyclopedia - Apple Newton

Apple - Growing apples: Encyclopedia - Cashew

The Cashew (Anacardium occidentale) is a tree in the flowering plant family Anacardiaceae. The plant is native to northeastern Brazil, where it is called by its Portuguese name Caju (the fruit) or Cajueiro (the tree). It is now widely grown in tropical climates for its cashew nuts and cashew apples. Originally spread from Brazil by the Portuguese, the cashew tree today can be found in all regions with a sufficiently warm and humid climate. What appears on the tree to be the fruit of the cashew tree is an ov ...

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Read more here: » Cashew: Encyclopedia - Cashew

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Apple - Growing apples
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