Photo courtesy of Columbia Basin Nursery

Apple : BROOKFIELD GALA® Dwarf (G41)

$49.95

251 in stock

This well-known New Zealand native is one of the top commercial varieties of today along with Ambrosia and Honeycrisp. Of the big three, Brookfield® Gala is the first to ripen, so there is usually no shortage of shoppers eagerly awaiting it's arrival. The original Gala is a cross of Golden Delicious and Cox Orange Pippen, which handily explains the crowd-pleasing flavour. Brookfield® is simply a Gala selected for it's improved colouring. Since we usually graft some for commercial orchards, we've made them available for you too.

NEEDS A POLLENIZER | ZONE 4/5 | HARVEST: MID SEPT.

Rootstock
Zone
Harvest
Rootstocks
G41 Dwarf
(2.5-3.1m/8-10ft)
G935 Small Semi-Dwarf
(3.25-4m/10-13ft)
G969 Small Semi-Dwarf
(3.25-4m/10-14ft)
G30 Semi-Dwarf
(3.6-5m/12-16ft)
G890 Semi-Dwarf
(3.6-5m/13-16ft)
Pollenator definitions
Some trees and many berry plants are SELF-FERTILE ̶means the insect pollinators or even the wind can pollinate the blossoms without the need of a second tree.
NEEDS A POLLENIZER ̶ means another tree of the same type or kind but a different variety must be blooming nearby at the same time.
EXAMPLE A Liberty apple and a Wealthy apple can cross-pollinate. Two trees of the same variety ie: ̶ 2 Wealthy apples, cannot cross pollinate because they are genetically identical.
Other trees are marked as SEMI-FERTILE. These will set fruit without a second tree. However they will often bear more, and sometimes larger fruit if another variety of the same kind of tree is nearby.
You can select 2 different trees of the same kind marked as NEEDS A POLLENIZER or plant one of those along with one SELF-FERTILE or one SEMI-FERTILE. Also consider ripening times ̶ a Goldrush apple might not start blooming before a Pristine is finished.

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