Malus domestica Haralson (Semi-Dwarf Apple)
Hardy, vigorous and productive, Malus domestica 'Haralson' is a culinary or dessert cultivar with a profusion of fragrant, white flowers in mid-season (mid-spring). Draped in clusters along the branches, they are truly a sight to behold. The flowers attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. They are followed in the fall by a heavy crop of medium-sized apples with red stripes and spots over a greenish-yellow background. Crisp, juicy, and mildly tart, they are perfect for eating, cooking, and making salad and sauces. Haralson often bears fruit the first year and is prone to biennial bearing (productive in alternating years). It is self-fertile but requires pollination by a tree of another variety with the same bloom period for better yields, such as Honeycrisp, Gala, or Red Delicious. Beautiful in bloom, heavy with luscious apples, and picturesque when old, apple trees are very rewarding additions to the landscape.
- Grows up to 12-15 ft. tall and wide (3-5 m).
- A full sun lover, this tree is easily grown in deep, loamy, moderately fertile, medium moisture, well-drained soils. Prefers a sheltered, frost-free position.
- Since edible apple cultivars do not grow well on their own roots, most varieties have been grafted onto rootstocks and are classified as dwarf (8-10 ft, 2-3 m), semi-dwarf (12-15 ft, 3-5 m) and standard (18-25 ft, 5-8 m). The fruit itself is full-size and not dwarfed. Dwarf or semi-dwarf apple trees offer some benefits: they produce fruit at an earlier age and are easier to manage (spray, prune and harvest).
- Apples should be pruned every year to get the best crop. They also need to be thinned to about 8 in. apart (20 cm) if you want to reap the best-quality fruit.
- This deciduous apple tree adds a charming presence, tucked into a shrub border or planted as a specimen.
- Keep an eye out for aphids, woolly aphid, rosy apple aphid, fruit tree red spider mite, mussel scale, codling moth, caterpillars, Apple scab, apple canker, powdery mildews, blossom wilt, and honey fungus.
- Propagate by chip budding or grafting onto a clonal rootstock for fruit.
Requirements
Hardiness | 4 – 8 |
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Climate Zones | 1, 1A, 1B, 2, 2A, 2B, 3, 3A, 3B, 7, 14, 15, 16 |
Plant Type | Fruit, Trees |
Plant Family | Malus – Apples |
Exposure | Full Sun |
Season of Interest | Spring (Mid,Late)Summer (Early,Mid,Late)Fall |
Height | 12' – 15' (3.6m – 4.5m) |
Spread | 12' – 15' (3.6m – 4.5m) |
Water Needs | Average |
Maintenance | High |
Soil Type | Clay, Loam, Sand |
Soil pH | Neutral |
Soil Drainage | Moist but Well-Drained, Well-Drained |
Characteristics | Fragrant, Showy, Fruit & Berries |
Attracts | Bees, Birds, Butterflies, Hummingbirds |
Garden Styles | Informal and Cottage |