Jake Smith
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2025
- Messages
- 56
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I wish we could grow them here, but it just gets too cold in the winter for them to be outside. We tried having lemon trees in large containers and brought them inside in the winter, but they took up a lot of room in the living area, and they still were not large enough to have lemons. I think we might have gotten one lemon from the tree.
I ordered a dwarf red Rome apple and it should be here next week, and we will pant it out back. We have another red apple (don’t remember what kind it was anymore) but it never has apples, so i thought maybe it was one that needed a pollinator. So, maybe with the two of them, we can finally have apples.
Bobby put up stakes out front where we just planted the blueberry and bush cherries, because they are pretty short and hard to see, and he does not want to accidentally walk on one or mow it along with the grass.
I have a crab apple tree growing in my garden it's about 13 foot tall I planted it last year.
It's for the wild birds to eat the crab apples but they don't seem to eat them.
Berries would be a better food source for the birds @Smithy, but the birds may eat your crabapples if they rot first. There is the problem. You can use the crabapples to make vinegar, cider, or jelly. I don't think you do much of that stuff though, right?I have a crab apple tree growing in my garden it's about 13 foot tall I planted it last year.
It's for the wild birds to eat the crab apples but they don't seem to eat them.
I have a crab apple tree growing in my garden it's about 13 foot tall I planted it last year.
It's for the wild birds to eat the crab apples but they don't seem to eat them.
Our chickens eat them, but they don't eat a lot of them and they have to be either soft or mashed. They wouldn't be the ideal food for birds, but we use them all the time here for ourselves. In Europe I am told they are the ideal fruit to use for vinegar and are treasured for that purpose. Here they are usually used for jelly.Years ago, we had a crabapple tree at one house where we lived. It only had fruit every other year. We did eat the little apples, and I think I made applesauce and maybe apple butter with them. The horses and goats enjoyed them, and so did the rabbits, but I don’t remember if the chickens ate them or not; so maybe birds would not like them either.
Our chickens eat them, but they don't eat a lot of them and they have to be either soft or mashed. They wouldn't be the ideal food for birds, but we use them all the time here for ourselves. In Europe I am told they are the ideal fruit to use for vinegar and are treasured for that purpose. Here they are usually used for jelly.
