Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa'

Redbud Crabapple

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Common Name: 

Redbud Crabapple

Plant Type: 

Flower color: 

Foliage color: 

Green

Sun (From 0 to 5): 

Water (From 0 to 5): 

Maximum temperature: 

40°C

Minimum temperature: 

7°C

Maximum height: 

610 cm

Maximum width: 

610 cm

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Description

Apples are deciduous trees and shrubs with simple leaves and white, pink or red flowers with five petals. Apples are thought to be an American fruit, but they are not. The ancestors of the modern Apple is native to Asia and the Middle East. Modern Apples are highly hybridized and the fruit share little resemblance with the ancestral Apple.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Blooming

Clustered five-petaled blossoms with 15-20 stamens in center. Blooms generally before leaves unfold. Pink to red buds that fade as they bloom followed by red, yellow fruits.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Growth

Deciduous trees and shrubs, including the orchard trees that produce apples, and ornamental crabapples trees, whose fruit is also edible, but usually too tart to consume. Species grow best in full sun, but tolerate partial shade.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Planting

Sow seeds in fall in a seedbed. Can also propagate by budding in summer. Grafting is also possible and should be completed during the winter.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Pest

Modern-day cultivars are less disease prone than older varieties. Malus plants are most vulnerable to cedar-apple rust, apple scab, and fireblight. Other problems include crown and fruit rot, brown fruit rot, heart rot, mushroom root rot, and cankers. Common pests are fruit worms, Japanese beetle, caterpillars, scale insects, aphids, wood boreres, skeletonizers, and leaf rollers.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Interesting facts

Fruits produced by some species of Malus, including the Crabapples, are too sour to eat raw and work best in ciders. Smoking food on Apple wood gives the food a good flavor.

Redbud Crabapple (Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa') - Soil and irrigation

Well-drained, acid or alkaline, loamy or clay soil.

Malus x zumi var. calocarpa 'var. calocarpa' - Redbud Crabapple - Photos