Discover the Top 10 Cold Hardy Fruit Trees you need in your garden! These trees are perfect for growing in colder climates, ensuring a delicious harvest no matter where you live. Whether you’re an experienced gardener or just starting out, these fruit trees will thrive in your backyard and provide you with fresh, homegrown produce for years to come. From apples to figs, learn the best varieties for cold weather and how to grow them successfully.
🌳 What You’ll Learn:
• The best cold-hardy fruit trees for your garden
• How to care for these trees in harsh climates
• Tips for maximizing your fruit harvest even in cooler regions
• Why these trees are a must-have for any home gardener
🌿 Featured Trees:
1. Hardy Apple Varieties
2. Cold Climate Figs
3. Winter Pear Trees
…and more!
👉 Start growing your own fruit trees today!
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#ColdHardyFruitTrees #GardeningTips #HomeGardening #GrowYourOwnFruit #ColdClimateGardening #FruitTreesForColdClimates #EdibleLandscaping #HomegrownFruit
16 Comments
I love these videos. they helped me choose a lot of items for my food forest side yard.
Thanks for the video. I've grown many apple varieties over the years. I found a local that deals in native southern variety apples and pears. Just in the last 3 years, I've finally had good results with apple trees here in MS.
I wish I could get a breadfruit tree to grow in Maine.
Good list
I heard on a podcast yesterday that the Colorado orange apple tree, which was thought to be extinct, was recently found growing in a hidden grove in Colorado. While they have successfully grown some grafts of it, it is still near extinction. On the podcast, they said it is a delicious winter apple and also that no apple grown from seed will taste like the parent apple.
Outside of the mulberry are any of those cold hardy enough for Florida?
I recommend not growing stone fruit. There are just too many diseases and pest. If you do grow them you will need to spray after every rain for both pests and disease. It's really not worth the money or time imo. The figs, pawpaws, mulberry and chi are easy to grow and you don't need to spray anything.
Great info on the fruit plants to grow. I would add Pluots to your list. Pluots are game changer to every gardener's yard. You'll get compliments from friends and family if they haven't tasted them before.
not cold enough here for cherries :'(
There is also Diospyros Lotus!
Paw paw trees grow wild on my 3 acre property in northern Virginia.
Love your videos!! I will say tho, we do have many varieties of native plums that are super easy to grow!! Chickasaw, American, Beach, Mexican, Creek, and 10 others. Also we have 3 native crabapple trees: Sweet, Southern, & Prairie. PLANT NATIVE FIRST🪶🙏🏽🫀🌎
My pest problem is huge. Literally. Big a55 deer that ate over $1000 worth of bare root transplants I put in. 🤬
My zone 3 is too cold for nearly everything on your list lol. I have lots of different berry bushes , apples do great here, the rest of your list do not unfortunately .
In view of northern USA states and Canada, our idea of "cold Hardy" trees could be misleading if you include "figs" in your list of Cold Hardy plants. Fig trees cannot survive in Zone 5. It need elaborate insulation around the tree if left in the open during the winter.
Hi, I have seeds now for over 680 species and cultivars, looking to plant them in food forests in southern Oregon and New Mexico, can we compare notes on saving rare food and medicinal species?