Javascript required
Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

How to Draw an Apple Blossom Tree

LTM's extensive organic gardens feature fruit trees, vegetables, culinary and medicinal herbs, grapes, and berries.

This article will break down how I gave new life to an old apple tree.

This article will break down how I gave new life to an old apple tree.

Reviving an Old Apple Tree Organically

If you purchase a property with a neglected garden, you're bound to be faced with challenges. But if your garden includes neglected fruit trees, you are gifted with opportunities.

My current home came complete with two old apple trees. At first glance, they were no more than potential firewood

However, after applying the basic principles of organic garden management, I was rewarded with a large harvest of heritage apples.

If you have a fruit tree that's destined for the too-hard basket alongside your fireplace, I urge you to take a moment and consider the options.

With a bit of love and attention, you might share my success.

The Importance of Creative Sustainability

If you live off the grid, as I do, or simply hope to achieve a goal of being as self-sufficient and sustainable as possible, it is important to become creative about problem-solving in the garden. Our gardens provide us with fresh fruit and vegetables.

In today's economy, waste is not an option. If rejuvenating an existing fruit tree increases the amount of fresh food available to you and your family, any effort becomes a small price to pay.

My methods are a little different from the advice gardeners normally offer. But you just need to look at the photos to see there was nothing normal about my tree!!

I choose to be organic. My solutions to any problem in the garden rely on nature's remedies. As you are about to discover, my apple trees responded well to my techniques.

Could you have the same success with a different type of fruit tree? Maybe. You certainly won't know unless you try.

give-new-life-to-old-apple-trees
Inside the hollow base. Taken with a flash.

Inside the hollow base. Taken with a flash.

My Top Tips for Rejuvenating Old Apple Trees

  • Prune in the Spring, Before New Growth: Don't be too savage at first. Anything ancient deserves respect!
  • Aerate the Soil: Encourage your hens to scratch and feed at the base of the tree.
  • Strengthen the Roots: Hen manure, comfrey leaves, and mulch helped mine.
  • Provide Another Apple Tree for Cross-Pollination: Choose a variety that flowers at the same time of year.
  • Control Insects and Pests: Fennel attracts bees and at the same time deters unwanted pests, particularly pests that spend part of their life cycle in the ground.
  • Water Thoroughly: I didn't water often, but when I did I gave a thorough soaking around the root line.
  • Protect Fruit From Birds: Cover with netting if you hope to make lots of apple pies!
give-new-life-to-old-apple-trees

Scroll to Continue

Read More From Dengarden

Is an Ancient Apple Tree Worth Saving?

We inherited two old apple trees on our property. We were told they were more than 100 years old. By my reckoning that makes them ancient.

I asked the former owner what I could expect; red or green, sweet or tart? In the ten years that she'd lived here, she'd never seen an apple and had often considered chopping the trees down. Their removal jumped close to the top of my husband's list of things to do.

There's little point in having a completely unproductive tree in any orchard, but I'd never seen an apple tree so old and I agreed in principle to its removal—on the condition that I get at least one season to see if I could detect any signs of life.

We pruned the old tree but the signs were not good. The trunk was rotten and hollow and my husband was not to be trusted alone with the chainsaw.

As you can see from my photos, the tree was so old it had created its own crutch. The only thing stopping it from toppling over.

My daughter and I covered the tree with netting because that's what one does with apple trees. My husband and I later removed the netting because only strangely eccentric women put netting over dead apple trees.

Okay, the man had a point.

give-new-life-to-old-apple-trees

Year One

Visitors were convinced the trees were dead and laughed at my stubborn determination to give the trees a chance. They would have laughed louder had the netting stayed in place.

Cockatoos, galahs, and other native birds will devour the fruit on any tree given the chance, but we were not convinced we'd see any growth in the old apple trees. When leaves are unlikely, there's no need to worry about apples.

We were genuinely surprised by the first signs of new life. As the season progressed, there was green on the crusty old branches. Then flowers.

Flowers!! That was exciting.

Sadly though, no apples.

Fresh new life springs from my tired old apple tree.

Fresh new life springs from my tired old apple tree.

Year Two

The second year, I was determined to see fruit. We have two old apple trees but they are positioned too far apart for convenience. We were already planting our orchard to extend between the two ancient trees and I'd planted Granny Smith and Pink Lady apples, plus another apple tree with multiple grafts so it would produce gala and delicious apples. But they were only young.

I watered and mulched the new apple trees, but I gave extra attention to the grand old lady with the crutch.

When my husband announced he would build a second hen house to accommodate a different breed of chickens, I convinced him to create a temporary hen house and fenced area around the base of the old apple tree. I hoped their scratching would help aerate the soil, their pecking would help eliminate any bugs in the ground and the branches, and their manure would provide much-needed nourishment for the roots.

The hens moved in and spent the winter scrambling up and down the frame of the tree and busying themselves around its base.

When springtime arrived we relocated the hens and I put the next stage of my plan into action.

Our first big vegetable garden was productive and attracting bees, but I wasn't confident that would solve the pollination issue for the apple trees. I bought a dwarf Pink Lady apple tree that was small, but flowering, and planted it in the biggest pot I could find.

I mulched it with comfrey leaves and watered it well while waiting for the ancient apple trees to flower.

We dragged the potted Pink Lady to rest beneath the first old tree to flower, then dragged it again to spend time with the other.

Can you imagine how happy I was to see fruit? Not a lot of fruit, I confess, but we had apples forming on both trees. The one I'd neglected had no more than a dozen tiny apples, but my favourite one was dotted with tiny fruit.

Cockatoos ate every single one of them. Grrrr.

Compare the size of three of my comfrey leaves (grown organically, of course) with three lemon leaves. Lots of goodness in a comfrey mulch!

Compare the size of three of my comfrey leaves (grown organically, of course) with three lemon leaves. Lots of goodness in a comfrey mulch!

I plant fennel as protection for all my fruit trees, including apples.

I plant fennel as protection for all my fruit trees, including apples.

Year Three

It is very disappointing to come so close to success and be thwarted at the last moment. I still didn't know if the apples would be tasty or not, but I was determined to find out.

I had plenty of time to make further improvements before my third season arrived. It was time to get serious about pruning, and watering, and keeping birds and bugs away.

We pruned most of the top of the tree but I was reluctant to give it too much of a shock and insisted we keep the low hanging branches to enable me to create new roots for a new generation of tree when they touched the ground within a few years

I planted fennel at the base of the apple tree because fennel, in my experience, deters all kinds of pests. It is particularly useful for protecting fruit trees from cherry and pear slug and I had seen plenty of the slugs on our hawthorn trees (also inherited) as well as my new pear trees, cherry trees, plums, apricots and peaches.

Call me crazy, but I suspected they might also like to feast on apple trees.

This time as the trees filled with leaves, then flowers, we dragged the potted Pink Lady apple tree back for short visits to each tree. Every Saturday we moved it again.

At the first hint of fruit, we replaced the netting. Generally, my husband and I build a frame over a tree to be netted but the ancient apple trees are huge. The best we could do was toss the nets up and over.

Worthy of netting—at last!

Worthy of netting—at last!

Look at It Now: A Real Apple Tree!

The same tree is happy, healthy, and laden with apples!

give-new-life-to-old-apple-trees
I wish I'd thought to take photos before I had picked bucket loads of apples. :)

I wish I'd thought to take photos before I had picked bucket loads of apples. :)

One Happy Old Apple Tree

I am delighted to tell you that the apples are wonderful. They are firm and crunchy, the way we like our apples.

This year there was no need to drag the potted Pink Lady across the grass. Nature took care of pollination, and my other apple trees are all fruiting as well.

The grand old apple tree, my favorite, has contributed hundreds of apples to our harvest this year.

I have no way of knowing how much longer it will last because the trunk is still hollow and feeble looking, but this year was a bumper crop.

Anyone with an ancient apple tree, or even just an old one, should make an effort to try and rejuvenate it. The rewards are terrific!

Check out these apples !!

Check out these apples !!

My ancient apple tree, frail and neglected, is now an active participant in my garden. Give your tree the same kind of attention and hope for the same success!

My ancient apple tree, frail and neglected, is now an active participant in my garden. Give your tree the same kind of attention and hope for the same success!

This article is accurate and true to the best of the author's knowledge. Content is for informational or entertainment purposes only and does not substitute for personal counsel or professional advice in business, financial, legal, or technical matters.

Questions & Answers

Question: Can we grow plants around a dead apple tree?

Answer: If your apple tree is definitely dead, you could grow plants around it. But if you want to try reviving it the way I did with mine, it won't like the competition.

© 2013 LongTimeMother

Maria on May 23, 2020:

Thank you sooo much!!

Ive been looking for your kind of answer for years! Gave me something to work!

Same as you when i bought the house years ago, the former owner told me to cut the tree as you could actualy move it just with one hand!

Wasnt giving much apples and they were all deformed and brown

I gave the tree a name a love and crystal healing..

Eaxh year grew stronger and has been giving the most amaxing huge perfect apples, more each year!

But the trunk continued to go more and more hollow.

This is the next step to help it as gave abundantly all its love!!

Thank you

KarenWales on September 14, 2018:

I have an old apple tree that is about to be taken down. The tree is about 70 years old. Only produces a few apples each year. I don't care if it produces fruit -- I love the tree but my husband wants it gone. Seeing this story makes me wonder if I should fight for the tree. In the last couple of years it has been broken in a storm and hit by a plow. I probably should let it go.

But I feel sad about it.

I don't know how to help it.

If it does come down, it will be made into many wooden spoons and probably some boat parts.

At least I will honor it in this way.

Karen on May 14, 2017:

So happy to see this. just inherited a Bramley apple which is 100+ years old with a hollow trunk, you have given me hope! https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1015861331...

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on June 26, 2016:

Because you were excited by 5 apples, I'm thinking your apple tree is not very big or very old. (Most apple trees will give you five apples in one tight bunch.) Otherwise, your lack of fruit was due to lack of pollination. You need another apple tree nearby, flowering at the same time for pollination. And bees to help cross-pollinate.

Your current problem is a bit of a guess for me. From your clues, I suggest you water the tree. Good heavy soaking around the root area once a week if you can manage it. Remember, the roots are likely to have grown as wide as the branches. The peeling bark might indicate a pest or disease. When the ground is wet, pull out any grass close to the tree trunk. (Don't dig the grass, just pull it, because you don't want to harm roots near the surface.) Blast the tree trunk with water from your hose, in the hope of dislodging anything that's trying to take hold. If you add mulch, keep it away from the tree trunk. Ask questions at your local plant nursery or from other local gardeners because they'll have a better idea of your local pests and diseases. You might need to treat the problem with a specific remedy.

Many plants including apple trees are remarkably resilient and able to resist pests and diseases if their growing conditions allow them to grow stronger than whatever is attacking them. You just have to look at the photos of the decimated trunk on my old apple tree to see evidence of that. Give your apple tree water and nutrition. Don't give up on it because it is having a bad year. Try and help it grow stronger, and you may well be rewarded with apples next year. Good luck.

DC63 on June 25, 2016:

Hi!

I was excited to find your article. We have an apple tree that was doing great until 2 years ago. It was a hard winter and it had been pruned probably too much that year also. That was two years ago...last year I had 5 apples on it so didn't think it had been harmed but this year, I had a few new branches and some leaves but then they all dried up and the bark began to peel off the tree. I am so sad that my tree may be gone. Do you have any advice for this one??

Thanks!!

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on October 03, 2013:

Thank you, Anita. The old tree is blossoming beautifully again this year. I suspect we will have another fine harvest in summer. :)

Anita Saran from Bangalore, India on October 03, 2013:

What an inspiring hub! I do love gardening myself and have a little veggie garden that's doing pretty well at a couple of months old. Kudos for making the old apple tree young again and getting it to gift you with quality apples. Voted up.

Dale Anderson from The High Seas on May 13, 2013:

WOW I can't believe that you re-lifed that tree! I doff my cap to you!

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 27, 2013:

PS. I'm particularly pleased to see you writing about gardening, liesl5858. We need to spread the word. lol.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 27, 2013:

Hi liesl5858. I remember your beautiful winter photos. I have been back to check on that hub and saw that quite a few other hubbers have discovered it too. In fact I currently have your pak choi hub open and I'm trying to get a spare moment to comment on that one as well. :)

I am pleased to see that you have been busy writing more hubs. I'll be over to take a look soon. Take care, and thanks for the nice comments.

Linda Bryen from United Kingdom on April 27, 2013:

Congratulations LongTimeMother on your Hub Of The Day achievement, you really deserve it for a fantastic hub. It is amazing how you get rewarded for your persistence. I really like you and your hubs, you are such an inspiration to me and I never forget you helped me with uploading my photos and writing the sources. I am really glad to be following you.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 27, 2013:

Thank you, prasetio30. I hope your uncle grows lots of lovely apples to share with you. :)

prasetio30 from malang-indonesia on April 26, 2013:

Very informative hub. I'll show this hub to my uncle. He has apple garden. I hope this hub useful for him. Thanks for writing and sharing with us. Voted up :-)

Prasetio

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 25, 2013:

Thanks, DzyMsLizzy.

I have never seen a gopher in real life. Red and grey squirrels lived in trees outside our window in the UK and they were really cute. We don't have them here in oz. I have planted one almond tree here but compared to the hazelnut trees, the almond is slow to take off.

We have great big wombats in the area that dig holes in the ground (and wander slowly across the roads creating hazards at night) but none have dug up my gardens yet.

Maybe someday I should make a hub about the critter-friendly traps we use to relocate possums. You might be able to adapt it to gophers. :)

Liz Elias from Oakley, CA on April 25, 2013:

Congratulations on HOTD! What a wonderful, inspiring story for any gardener.

We don't have a huge property--only about 3/4 of an acre--but that's certainly larger than the San Francisco backyards with which we both grew up.

When we moved here, we inherited several old almond trees. We usually get a bumper crop on one of them, a so-so-crop on another, and the third is actually dead...oh, yeah..and we accidentally killed a 4th by drowning it in an attempt to get rid of gophers without using poison or nasty traps that can injure other wildlife, such as squirrels. We enjoy the squirrels. In fact, the squirrels usually get all of the almonds, and I don't really care, as I don't know how to process them, and they are not my favorite nut anyway.

Voted up, interesting and useful. Maybe I'll buy an apple or cherry tree.......

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 25, 2013:

Special thanks to Careermommy for nominating this as a Hub of the Day. And to Simone and HP for making it one.

I will certainly repay the compliment and visit hubs from all hubbers who took the time to comment here.

Nice to see a sense of community is alive and well here at HP! :)

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 25, 2013:

greatstuff, hello. I would have no hope growing a mango tree where I live now. I'll be interested to hear how it works for you though. In theory, the comfrey and fennel and hens on the ground should be just as effective on a mango tree. Thanks for your positive feedback. :)

Jenn-Anne, thank you. I am relatively new to apple trees. I've been told to expect they'll only crop well every second year ... by the same people who told me my old tree was completely dead. lol. I won't know until next year whether or not I can expect the same level of success. Good luck with yours!

eurozulu, that's a good idea to cover the dead plum tree with bird feeders. I'd laugh if the bird droppings fertilize the tree enough to give some new life. Maybe you could sneak in and prune the tree a little. lol.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 25, 2013:

Hi SaraGardner, Finland! wow. I'll have to take a look at your hubs and see what I can learn. :) Your leaf litter around the apple tree would have to be providing warmth and food. I'm not surprised your apples are getting bigger. I don't know how big your tree is, but the roots that obtain the most food are supposed to be the roots beneath the tree line - the tips of the outstretching branches. That's always confused me a little, because if you prune a tree the branches don't stretch as far. Anyway, your system is obviously working. I'm sure you must have a lovely colony of earthworms doing good things around all the roots of your tree!

pstraubie48, thank you very much. :)

ComfortB, thank you. I am not always so patient. lol.

moronkee, you sound like me. I get excited when I read other people's success stories. Thank you!

vandynegl, 10 trees already. That's a great start. My husband will be pleased to hear he's not the only one who instantly thinks 'firewood'. I'll give him the good news. :)

kittythedreamer, I hadn't thought about the Celtic relevance. Thanks for the prompt.

bradley brown from Harrow Middlesex on April 24, 2013:

There's something nice about dead tree's depending on what they look like, my parents have a dead plum tree which they now use for feeding the birds, just covered it with all types of feeders.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 24, 2013:

Hi leahlefler. It will take a long time for your babies to look like the old lady in my garden. You'd better leave a note for your great-great-granchildren. :) Yes, try the fennel. It makes a huge difference in my garden. (I can feel another hub with photos brewing ...)

Thanks summerberrie. Happy to contribute anything I can to make your thumb greener.

Valene, hello. Australia is about the same size as the USA. The north of the country is in the tropics, but I bailed out and came in search of four distinct seasons so I could grow apples and stone fruit for a while. Lots of different types of cockatoos where I live now, not just the white ones. All of them love fresh fruit. :)

Your Cousins, I hope you'll try again. The best time to plant a new apple tree is in the autumn/fall or the spring after frosts and before heat.

Jenn-Anne on April 24, 2013:

Wonderful hub - congrats on getting HOTD! We inherited two baby apple trees when we bought our house and I love them. The fruit they produce is delicious! We're still figuring out the fine art of pruning, watering and pest control but are hoping to get better and better crops every year.

Mazlan A from Malaysia on April 24, 2013:

I admired your patience and perseverance. This is awesome and I am inspired by what you had done. We had an old mango tree, but not as ancient as your apple tree, probably about 50 years old. I might try your technique! Thanks for sharing and congrats on your well-deserved HOTD

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 24, 2013:

Hi liesl5858. Thanks for the compliments. I find fennel is really helpful for my pears and plums, so if you get little pests on your leaves, remember to plant some at the base of your trees. (Won't keep the birds away, though!) Good luck with your orchard.

Sam Elder, thank you. :)

FlourishAnyway, I love it when nature steps up and does something really impressive, lol.

bydojo, hello. I will head over and check out some of your hubs when I get a minute. I've never been to Romania. Thanks for your feedback :)

RTalloni, thanks so much for your comment. Didn't even notice the absence of a congrats ... but lovely of you to come back again! I have an orchard in place now, probably bigger than I need but I have lots of friends who will help me eat the fruit, lol. Good luck with your fruit trees!

Just Ask Susan, thank you. I'm not sure I'll ever be as prolific and successful as you, the master hubber ... but I'm having fun trying to catch up, lol. :)

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 24, 2013:

mjkearn, thanks very much. I will be taking a look at the hubs of everyone who was kind enough to comment here ... starting with yours. :)

jpcmc, thank you. I am also a fan of orchids.

The Dirt Farmer, thanks. This is my first place with apple trees. Farmed lots of dirt over the years, but never with apples before. :)

CozyPozy, thanks for the feedback. Who knows what the future holds ... At least you'll have a few ideas if ever you get the chance, lol.

Kitty Fields from Summerland on April 24, 2013:

Amazing. The apple tree was sacred to the Celts for many reasons. Great hub!

vandynegl from Ohio Valley on April 24, 2013:

Awesome! I like your patience! I would do the same thing (and my husband would argue for firewood!). I just planted 10 new trees on our property, but none of them apples! That is next on our list! Thank you for the great ideas!

Moronke Oluwatoyin on April 24, 2013:

Actually, after reading your hub, I was clapping for you. You applied the principle of perseverance in this case. While your friends were laughing, you showed stubborn determination to nuture the tree. I have a learnt a lesson fron your hub. Thanks

Comfort Babatola from Bonaire, GA, USA on April 24, 2013:

Beautiful! What an encourage account.

What was thought to be dead came to life again. Patience and endurance are definitely virtues worth having.

Congrats on this well-deserved HOTD award.

Patricia Scott from North Central Florida on April 24, 2013:

Congrats on HOTD. This was an interesting lesson in how to resurrect an old tree. Thanks for sharing :) ps

Angels are on the way to you

Sara Gardner from Finland on April 24, 2013:

I had an old apple tree in the garden when I moved here (to Finland), not ancient but probably around 50 years old and my mum said I should just chop it down but instead I put a wire fence around it, 1m in diameter and 1m high then filled it with leaves in the autumn. I like to think that it keeps the tree warm and protected whilst also providing extra nutrients as the leaves compost. I've had apples every year since I started and they are gradually getting bigger too.

Your Cousins from Atlanta, GA on April 24, 2013:

I learned a lot from this hub. I planted a small apple tree several years ago, but apparently didn't give it enough TLC and it died. I love the way you nursed your trees back to life. This is a great HOTD.

Valene from Missouri on April 24, 2013:

Where are living that you have to worry about cockatoos? I didn't know apple trees would grow in the tropics! I bet it is beautiful where you are. Great hub, I love this story of renewal!

summerberrie on April 24, 2013:

Congrats on HOTD. A beautiful and informative article. Well done and useful to those of us with partial green thumbs :)

Leah Lefler from Western New York on April 24, 2013:

Our apple trees are just babies, but when they become old and look as if they're past producing fruit, I will remember this hub and try to breathe life back into them! I didn't know fennel would repel pests - we have quite a few garden pests in our area, so I will have to plant some fennel to keep them away! Congratulations on HOTD!

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 24, 2013:

Thanks for the comments that are coming in, everyone. I'd love to stop and read them, but I've just noticed my solar batteries are lower than I'd like. (School holidays and I've had a house full of kids using everything electrical all day, lol.)

I'll log in tomorrow when the sun is out again ... munch an apple, and write back! Thanks again. :) LTM

Susan Zutautas from Ontario, Canada on April 24, 2013:

This is amazing that you brought this poor old tree back to life. I found your hub very interesting and inspiring. Congrats on a well deserved HOTD!

RTalloni on April 24, 2013:

Got lost in the account and forgot to say congrats on your Hub of the Day award!

RTalloni on April 24, 2013:

Success in this case gets extra yahoos! Thanks for sharing the story of how you gave new life to old apple trees. It's wonderful that you are seeing the fruit of your perseverance! :)

We are planning on air laying some branches of fruit trees this year. Hope you are able to have a mini orchard before you know it.

Ramona Jar from New York on April 24, 2013:

Terrific story. I'm a city girl, but love your determination and it really paid off. Sometimes we shouldn't be too quick to consider something 'dead', when some more work can bring out such wonderful results.

FlourishAnyway from USA on April 24, 2013:

Good for you and the tree that you had the persistence to stick with it. Amazing things can happen if we work hard and just believe.

SAM ELDER from Home on April 24, 2013:

Very useful and interesting hub.

Linda Bryen from United Kingdom on April 24, 2013:

Congratulations on your Hub of the Day Hub, well done. Thank you for the ideas because I also have inherited an apple tree, a pear tree and a plum tree. You write such wonderful hubs and am glad to follow you. Great hubs LongTimeMother. I always enjoy hubs like yours.Beautiful photos too.

CozyPozy from USA on April 24, 2013:

Love your story! Congratulations on HOTD. Maybe some day we'll have the opportunity to take your advice!

Jill Spencer from United States on April 24, 2013:

Congrats on HOTD. Wish we had an old apple tree so we could give it new life as you did yours. Wonderful story. All the best, Jill

JP Carlos from Quezon CIty, Phlippines on April 24, 2013:

WOW, this is an amazing hub and story. your determination is without question more than what others have. If I were in your situation, the first thought would be to use the old tree as driftwood for my orchids. But you gave life to it. That's a better choice. Great job!

mjkearn on April 24, 2013:

Hi LongTime

Congratulations on HOTD and so well deserved for this hub. Fabulous article and stunning pics. Will definitely be back to read more of your work. Voted up.

MJ.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 15, 2013:

Thank you, Careermommy, for nominating this as a Hub of the Day. I'll keep my fingers crossed. :)

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 15, 2013:

Hello, aviannovice. What you say about dead trees is absolutely true. We have lots of lovely homes for native birds and animals in the woods adjoining our home. That poor old apple tree, however, was destined for the fireplace because it sits right in the middle of our block.

When we arrived here my husband thought it was an eyesore. Now it's become a talking point! Its future is secure. lol.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 15, 2013:

You're welcome, Nicole. Every gardener I've ever known has been happy to share tips. We need more good food in the world! :)

Nicole A. Winter from Chicago, IL on April 15, 2013:

LongTimeMother: I can't thank you enough for all your excellent advice! I'll be sure to check back in now and then to ask questions and see how your apple tree is doing.

Deb Hirt from Stillwater, OK on April 15, 2013:

When the apple is no longer of any use to you, it will be useful for birds. When a tree dies, it can live on as a snag to provide homes to birds and small animals. When I was home, I had an apple that I had even grafted onto as a kid that still had lots of life at well over 100 years. Love and kindness can work wonders for living things, even trees.

Tirralan Watkins from Los Angeles, CA on April 14, 2013:

LongTimeMother, this is an awesome story of life! I was rooting for the apple tree and you told the story so well. This is worthy of a Hub of the Day award!

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 14, 2013:

Yes, I think a pot is a very good idea, particularly if you are not a confident gardener. The fennel plays a different role to comfrey. Fennel provides protection from bugs, while comfrey provides food for your plants. If you can afford it, I suggest you buy both.

The comfrey doesn't need to be anywhere near your fruit tree. It can grow anywhere in your garden. It will die down in winter and grow again in spring. The leaves grow large. Pick them and use them to feed your tree. (Wear gloves, they can get a little prickly.)

The fennel can be planted in the edge of your pot. The time will come when you have to separate them, but that's okay. Your tree will outgrow the pot one day anyway, or you can remove the fennel if it grows too big and just plant a little bit back in again. You can eat the fennel and its root. :)

Nicole A. Winter from Chicago, IL on April 14, 2013:

Actually, I guess I should ask you! I was thinking that because we're here in Chicago, (the winters get very cold here,) that I should start my tree off in a pot until it's of significant height / age? Then transplant it outdoors. I was considering growing the fennel you mentioned above, but if you think comfrey would work better for this kind of tree that's a fantastic idea, thank-you! I checked to see if the stone fruit trees would grow in my area and we are in the right zone.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 14, 2013:

lol. Don't hold your breath waiting for me to get results, Nicole. We are heading for winter now so I will graft next spring. Then I'm thinking I will have to remove any fruit for the first year or so while the graft and the branches strengthen.

By that time, the one you buy that was probably grafted a couple of years ago should be giving you a lovely fruit salad.

I planted about 30 different stone fruit trees here a couple of years ago. They began fruiting this year, which is great. We've had good rainfall but that's not to say we won't get years of drought in the future. I will graft the stone fruit, and graft some pear trees to each other plus the citrus.

Making fruit salad trees (multi-grafting) is really my safety plan in case for any reason I can't water all the trees. If I have some with multiple types of fruit on them, they are the ones that will get special attention.

Are you going to grow your tree in a pot? In many ways it will be easier for you to look after ... but you'll have to water it more often than if it was in the ground. Can I suggest you buy a comfrey plant when you get your tree. Plant the comfrey in the ground because it will develop a nice long taproot. It's great for mulch and for making a liquid food for fruit trees.

Might help you keep your new tree alive longer than your past efforts. lol. Good on you for continuing to try.

Nicole A. Winter from Chicago, IL on April 14, 2013:

We're thinking about getting a stone fruit salad tree. I didn't even realize that there were different varieties until after you mentioned it and I started looking for the one we were getting. The last time I looked, I guess I was very specifically looking for the ones with peaches on them! My daughter *really* wants a peach tree, but I'm not crazy about peaches, I mean, they're great & all that, but if you've a good fruit bearing tree you can end up with *a lot* of that fruit, so I think a fruit salad tree is the perfect compromise for our family! I'd love to see some hubs about how your grafting works out, it's not something I can do, (I kill everything I try to grow, but I keep trying anyway!,) but I love seeing other people's work on their gardens / orchards.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 14, 2013:

Hi Richaloe. It's amazing.

You can see in the top photos how significant the hole is. The third photo shows the type of damage at the top of the hole. I look a photo inside the hole, but it was just a big dark hole and seemed a silly photo to add.

I can't help but wonder if it is getting some nourishment from the crutch, but the crutch looks pretty rotten and frail as well.

The apples turned red, as you'll see in the bottom photo. They are lovely and crisp and not tart, which surprised me. I have no idea what type of apple it is.

My husband just shakes his head and laughs. He was quite convinced it was just deadwood. :)

richaloe from Oxford UK on April 14, 2013:

Very interesting. So the tree is hollow and yet fruits! What type of apple is it I wonder.

LongTimeMother (author) from Australia on April 13, 2013:

I guess you are talking about multi-grafted trees, Nicole. That's a concept I began exploring after buying a multi-grafted apple tree.

I have bought the tape and everything I need and plan to graft some of my lemon tree to my orange tree and reverse. I also intend to experiment with my stone fruits. I think it is a great idea.

Which type of fruit salad tree are you thinking of buying?

Nicole A. Winter from Chicago, IL on April 13, 2013:

Wow, this was a fascinating look into your honorable persistence! Absolutely amazing that you were able to rejuvenate your trees, very impressive. We don't have much of a backyard, but I'm looking forward very much to planting something called a fruit salad tree, (seriously, if you haven't heard of it, look it up, it's amazing!,) and planning out my garden in the next couple years.

monahantheas1944.blogspot.com

Source: https://dengarden.com/landscaping/Give-new-life-to-old-apple-trees