This is the elite level video we've been waiting for. Can we just band together already and get this man a 100 acres on a mountain somewhere and 2 assistants. Imagin what he could do.
@sempi8159 Жыл бұрын
If it were possible it would have already happened...
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I'm working on it. I seem to be making gains in my health, which could make all things possible. I will be able to afford at least a mountain property, just hoping to get something I'm worthy of, not some dry hillside with thin mountain soil.
@joshua5119 ай бұрын
I can't buy him 100 acres but I'll try to get scion wood from him next time.
@jonf2086 Жыл бұрын
I feel like one of the candy apples could be called “jolly brancher”
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
That's awesome lol. I have definitely though jolly rancher and even tried to think of names that are a play on that with no luck. I might use that! Good one. Not the new columnar tree though, it is not branchy enough ha ha. Maybe some offspring of that and hard candy cider...
@elkhound25 Жыл бұрын
Mad apple breeder scientist + caffeine = longer videos = win win for viewers !
@Tmakepeace Жыл бұрын
I'm getting out my engraver to rename my Flaxen to Pink Lemonade. Thanks for the update.
@Scrial Жыл бұрын
Patch notes IRL.
@lemagreengreen Жыл бұрын
Wow the Pink Lemonade... I want that tree!
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
It is pretty nifty. I think we can do better in the long run, but it's a fun and tasty apple. I think I have quite a few scions this year. Shouldn't be too expensive or anything.
@newfoundlandrules Жыл бұрын
Super detailed apple breeding project video AND cat footage? What more can we ask for?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Panda bears :)
@saltriverorchards4190 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for letting us know about pink lemonade being susceptible to sunburn. That’s very helpful because now I will set the trees up to allow more smaller branches above the scaffolds to hopefully provide some shade on the fruit. I usually open my trees up to maximize sunlight. I will treat these a little differently.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
It may not be a problem in some areas. Here it is a big problem.
@stephenluna7932 Жыл бұрын
Glad your energy levels were better, the cat co-star appearances was fun. Fun to nerd out about the apple varieties from your apple breeding.
@steveford9294 Жыл бұрын
This is great dedicated work, a treat for apple lovers. He is the kind of apple breeders we need , open source and in the public domain. Very good video that sparks curiosity and passion.. keep it up ,
@adam24817 Жыл бұрын
I'm a cider people!!! Love that you said you will serve our a bunch of cider varieties
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I'm thinking of collecting half a dozen or more of those up, giving them goofy names and providing them as an experimental bundle. We'll see. I'm at least trying to keep track of them this year so that would be possible.
@adam24817 Жыл бұрын
@@SkillCult sounds good to me, everything I got from you last season is doing great!
@derekclawson4236 Жыл бұрын
It's just totally awesome the work your doing. Nice special cactus too!
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
A lot of those cactus are grafted to my seedling King Tubby, which as a result should be available next year.
@derekclawson4236 Жыл бұрын
I used to have a grand thricho collection but didn't move them one winter and killed a bunch. Still have some but no longer a ton of great clones. I'll possibly grab a cutting of yours someday. Where would you make them available whenever they are ready?
@TXVETJEB Жыл бұрын
I watched the whole thing, so I'll wear my "Apple Nerd" label with price. Glad you had such a good year. It's been the worst year for apples here in North Texas. The near 110 degree temps day after day cooked them on the tree and almost all rotted before they ripened. There's always next year. Thanks for the video.
@keepersnurserykarim Жыл бұрын
Great video and good luck with the breeding Stephen, as a Brit I have no taste reference for the majority of the apples you bred with in the first place😅 and now it seems I'm several generations behind your latest seedlings
@seandwyer2020 Жыл бұрын
Informative, but dense. Will need to watch a couple more times. I'm sorry about standing health issues Steven. Best to you.
@FlomatonFamous Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video, thanks for taking us along.
@DevaJones03 Жыл бұрын
the over scratching didnt work at all LMAO that cat was loving that LOL yall are adorable together
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Yeah, failed strategy! Insatiable I guess.
@DeeSixHomestead Жыл бұрын
My chestnut crab has the red veins in the flesh! Such a good apple! ❤
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Interesting, never seen that.
@wingama Жыл бұрын
Awesome as always!
@aussiehardwood6196 Жыл бұрын
Your apples look beautiful, like true little miracles. I'm gonna check out your site and maybe get some seed.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
seeds will be available this winter sometime. Subbing to my blog is a good way to find out when they are ready.
@dlbuffmovie Жыл бұрын
YES CIDER APPLE TESTS PLEASE.... :-) I only found one wild graft I wanted to try this year. Nothing else I tried this year made me go back for a cutting. I've found two for juice quantity and now looking for the flavor apples. Willing to test more, but I am in the NE.
@travisbrock5024 Жыл бұрын
There is a Champagne apple already. Originally from a random tree in New Mexico. It now resides at Dixon’s Apple Orchard in Wisconsin.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
thanks, I looked it up already too. Been bouncing around names for TAPKAIP :)
@anastasia31032 ай бұрын
Why not calling it “champagne bubbles” instead ❤
@LilacDaisy2Ай бұрын
So interesting!!! I hope you have geese to enjoy cleaning up all those fallen apples for you! ;-)
@SkillCult25 күн бұрын
Maybe they would chase off the other wildlife lol. Vicious things.
@matthewmiller4209 Жыл бұрын
Applepunk Gandalf!
@aussiehardwood6196 Жыл бұрын
Imagine being able to gift a friend or family member a big box of tasty fresh apples. That would be cool.
@bregbert4313 Жыл бұрын
I got a sweet 16 from you, grafted in March 2023. It produced 1 apple I ate oct 10 awesome apple.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear. It can be amazing. Here it has been so all over the place quality wise that I'm sort of giving up on it to grow for eating. I get a good year only every 4 or 5 years. I hope it is more consistent for you.
@bregbert4313 Жыл бұрын
I m in central utah. It had water core. Tasted like fresh squeezed apple juice.
@rachaelwittern16749 күн бұрын
Does saffron typically grow well near apple trees? I like this idea!
@TeamWachuma8 күн бұрын
I don't know. I'm sure it does fine. combining them could work as most of the saffron growth phase, at least here is while the apple trees have lost their leaves.
@InPrimer Жыл бұрын
I’m an apple nerd. Perfect video.
@averagejoetr3373 Жыл бұрын
My cherry crush did extremely well after being grafted on an older tree and then died the first winter. I have no idea why. The rest of the tree looks great. Zone 5b, Denver CO
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Bummer. it looks pretty healthy and vigorous here.
@saltriverorchards4190 Жыл бұрын
Bummer. I hope mine doesn’t die. I grafted my cherry crush onto a 6 year old mm111 this spring. It grew like crazy. Looks great right now.
@AceFace50001 Жыл бұрын
What song is that at 43:19? Sounds vaguely familiar.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Fuck Up's, Get Out, FU '82 EP A sleeper of early bay area punk.
@charlesward8196 Жыл бұрын
Where can I find out more about apple crossing? What do the number mean after the cross names?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I have a lot of content on apple breeding on a small scale, but I have changed the way I pollinate a lot over the years, so it isn't really current. I hope to update the stuff about making pollinations this spring. There are various levels of care you can take to insure different levels of certaintly regarding controlling the pollinations over random pollination by insects. Pretty much what I do now is pull off any opened blossoms, put a mesh bag over the branch, then as the flowers open, open the bag once a day to apply pollen from the pollen parent. You can see stuff on collecting pollen in other videos of mine. Here is the apple breeding playlist. kzbin.info/aero/PL60FnyEY-eJAMOPvU-yyF4JfuW5ocJvC4 The numbers are year 11 = 2011 and the second number is a random number in order to tell them apart. So grenadine x gold rush 11/2 is #2 of that cross, of however many. The convention is that seed parent is listed first and pollen parent second.
@MaluseedGrowers Жыл бұрын
Ice princess looks nice.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
it was probably the most compelling apple that day as far as something I wanted to keep tasting and eating. Very nice porcelain like smooth skin and complexion, aside from the scab.
@MaluseedGrowers Жыл бұрын
@@SkillCult Nice, one thing I started to notice when growing apples tree, you start to be begin to notice each varieties has its own unique leaves. Especially, Williams Pride & Liberty.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Some do really stand out as different. the trait of high variability seems to reach into almost every aspect of the trees. @@MaluseedGrowers
@tylerenloe7523 Жыл бұрын
What state can you grow cactus and apple trees outside? I’d love to know your stuff looks amazing
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Northern California and mid elevation. I'm in a zone where we get a bit of snow, hard freezes, but not too hard. Enough chill for almost all apples and stone fruits and just squeeze by with some cactus. Olives are fine too.
@gitgud6310 Жыл бұрын
Amazing!
@mdl17576 Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested in trying out Grenadine x goldrush 11/5. I make cider and the description you gave sold m. Plus that yellow skin with neon pink flesh, wow 0_0 I would also be on board for an experimental cider mix. It seems like your use of Grenadine has created a lot of good cider candidates. On that note, I just sqeezed a Sugarwood onto my refractometer - 16 brix. It's been a damp summer here in NY so not surprised it is coming in low. Not much acid or tannin but definitely picking up the savory character under the sweet. Highest brix for me so far was Hewes Crab at 18. 14 seeds from a Hewes x Sugarwood cross :) Finally, earlier this season I tasted a Pristine and if I hadn't watched your videos wouldn't have had the right words to describe it - musky was 100% accurate. Had never run across it before but wow, it's real. Thanks for the detailed vid! Oh wait. Triceratops. Two years ago it sounded awesome. One year ago, not so much. What's the verdict this year??
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I have never seen GRUsh x GREN 11/5 with that much pin flesh. Almost like I mislabelled something. I think 11/10 and Vanilla pink might be more interesting, redder, more pink, more berry flavors, more tannin, more acidic probably too. The tannin in Grenadine really comes through, often higher even. Sugarwood hangs late and is far from ripe here. You might let it hang or ripen off the tree a while and test again. My sugar levels here are insanely high, so you can't compare to my numbers in new york in any year., let alone with extra water. I had probably tasted that musky thing before and not had a name for it. Once I got this really musky apple, I had to figure it out and name it and now I'm tasting it more often. That apple by the way we'll get to in the next round and it is still very musky and promising. It has to be a new apple classification! Triceratops is probably not ripe. I'll hit it in the next round and see.
@mdl17576 Жыл бұрын
@SkillCult GRush x Gren 11/10 and Vanilla Pink both sound very promising, my only concern about those is that they may not ripen before the season here ends. I'd say anything later than Nov 1st is not going to finish some years. GRushXGren 11/5 and Maypole x Chestnut may be better bets from the climate angle. That said, if you're still offering them in a year or two I'll try them, but better to let the people with a bit longer season try first. I was probably over optimistic in trying Sugarwood, but this year at least, I think its got at least another week to ripen. I harvested a few early because they were controlled pollinations with an unidentified red Fleshed crab of high flavor I found growing in the neighborhood. The apples fell off and were hanging in the organza bag (thanks for recommending those) so it was time. Half a dozen left hanging if the darn birds will leave them alone. Got some seed from crosses with sugarwood this year x Williams Pride, x Hewes, xEnterprise as well. Hoping for earlier ripening with the xWP and xHewes crosses.
@orichalcumaes8404 Жыл бұрын
How about spritzer as the name for the formerly ice princess.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Damn, that's a good one! I'll put it in the short list.
@furyxan Жыл бұрын
Why are you moving? You have such a wonderful homestead there.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
My ex moved back and won't sell out to me. Not enough room for everyone and space to expand projects.
@BRIANLIMBARO11 ай бұрын
Nice
@marklam85488 ай бұрын
Your 90 variety test tree may not be a very precocious root stock... So I'm wondering what rootstock is that.? And the obvious rule for a test tree is get one that is quite precocious.😮😅
@SkillCult6 ай бұрын
I don't know, it was already here. it is at least a semi dwarf like M111 size, but probalby standard. could be clone, could be seedling, probably a malling clone.
@justin1730 Жыл бұрын
I had some brown spots in my apples this year that I attribute to both heat and bugs that got into them. We were hit with 90+ weather early this year, so I did not bag them as usual. Lost most of the crop, but I did not lose 3 hours bagging apples. My apples tend to sunburn worse in bags than out. Are you sure the browning around the core is not from coddling moth? P.S. The video is totally watchable at 1.5 speed. I pause and rewind for interesting details.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Mine sunburn worse in the organza bags, but not white paper. but they also don't ripen well in paper. We get days at or over 100 every year and many mid to high 90's. I would not be surprised if it is heat related but I'm not seeing it in other apples.
@remip6539 Жыл бұрын
2:40 : bitter-pit ?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
No, bitter pit is small deep spots. This is more of a general browning effect. Strange. Very probably physiological since it is showing on more than one tree. It doesn;t seem to affect eating quality or flavor much.
@Kommunist_Kittens Жыл бұрын
Now this is that premium content. It's like being at femboy Hooters and they have fresh scalloped potatoes. Truly divine. I miss my wife....
@DjapDude11111 Жыл бұрын
Wtf
@saltriverorchards4190 Жыл бұрын
Do you happen to have the parentage of cherry crush? I don’t have it in my notes.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
It has to be Cherry Cox x Grenadine, or vice versa.
@saltriverorchards4190 Жыл бұрын
@@SkillCult thank you
@soronos8586 Жыл бұрын
Where do you sell your trees?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
At this point, I sell seeds, pollen and cuttings for grafting, so no actual trees. They will be available eventually through me or other nurseries. In the meantime, you have to graft them, or I may make bench grafted trees available at some point too. Grafting is relatively easy to learn. You just need any apple tree or apple rootstock to graft onto. If you have a tree already, you can graft onto it. most cuttings are sold on my webstore www.skillcult.com/store and the ones I have very few of, or new stuff usually auctioned on www.figbid.com that happens late winter
@spsshorts56627 күн бұрын
Is it ideal to order pollen cause i am from India ,will pollen survive
@SkillCult7 күн бұрын
I can send pollen overseas. If the timing does not work out, you can probably hold it for a year. It may not work as well if it is older, but it will probably work, especially if you can store it cold for the year. I send pollen out as it is collected in the spring. So the timing may or may not work out. Subscribe to my blog to find out when it becomes available.. I can also send seeds. I'm done selling seeds for this year, but I sell them every year. Some are open pollianted by bees and some are crosses that I make.
@Jay-tk7ib Жыл бұрын
What do you use Saffron for?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
In rice, soups, curries, fish, chicken, kind of wherever it seems to fit I guess. Good in chicken soup, but alway measured. It is easy to over do it, or under do it too.
@Jay-tk7ib Жыл бұрын
@@SkillCult Thanks.
@MrChickadee Жыл бұрын
for the NERDS!!!!
@jonf2086 Жыл бұрын
@42:52 😂
@alancole1394 Жыл бұрын
Someone get Steven an assistant.....STAT. 😜
@rossmcguinn2256 Жыл бұрын
Do you ever use any sprays? I planted some fruit trees 3 years ago, and they're beginning to produce some fruit, but I get lots of brown spots and bad fruit. It doesn't bother me, but everyone on the internet says you have to use sprays. I'm pretty firm against that as I can only assume there are unavoidable health risks in spraying, but I'm completely ignorant on the subject. I'd rather eat spotty apples than die of cancer, but I'm too early in this thing to really see what the impact of not spraying will be on yields, most of my trees haven't produced fruit yet.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
You may not have to use chemical sprays. there are lots of less dangerous alternatives for many problems. I don't spray at all, but my climate is very low disease and pest pressure. that is one of the reasons the apple areas of washington are so good, is it is a dry desert like climate.
@projectmalus Жыл бұрын
If you live in a commercial apple growing area it might be required for you to spray, I've heard. The spraying itself is hazardous since it might be windy or the applicator isn't trained, doesn't have protective gear, or the groundwater gets polluted. I don't spray and it wouldn't work to grow apples commercially in the east as no spray, so I'm trying pears which also can be picked green to avoid the bears :) and taste better than apples arguably, more like peaches. Less disease with pears.
@projectmalus Жыл бұрын
Also cleaning up under the trees will go a long way to avoid nasties.
@KiltPatrick Жыл бұрын
Is there a reason you're keeping the "mot exciting" ones? That just says to me "more work, more effort, more mental notes for no pay-off", and I'd cull it.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Because it takes a while for them to come into bearing the best fruit they are going to. I"ve almost culled stuff that later got named and propagated, so just being cautious. Also the conditions are bad in there. As I thin them out and tidy up, they might produce much better fruit. If I knew for sure that they are very mediocre I would be more likely to cut them out.
@СерджиоБевз Жыл бұрын
Golden rush 1110 ...super healthy...😊❤❤❤like
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
It does look very healthy and vigorous. I didn't mention it, but the apples look blemish free, so it probably inherited gold rush's scab resistance too. It has some of the edgy, tannic and other flaws of grenadine to some degree, but it still may have its uses and potential for breeding improved, hopefully scab free red fleshed apples.
@thartwig Жыл бұрын
Doctors must hate this man.
@jeffreydustin5303 Жыл бұрын
Kill not graft?
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
Can't keep them all. the good ones get grafted for replication.
@abcabc39 Жыл бұрын
Browning inside is a calcium issue
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
whatever it is, that apple has an issue on at least three different trees.
@matievski1 Жыл бұрын
Seedlings take 15-20 years before they start to fruit. Those looks like are grafted young trees.
@primoculturefarms Жыл бұрын
Up here in the north I find it's about 7 years to fruit on their own roots. But nowhere near 15 to 20. And his are grafted over to dwarf rootstock.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I have not grown many on their own roots, but I would also think that is a bit on the long side. The ones I have fruited under very stressful conditions have fruited in 12 years or less, but not all have either. These are all on dwarfs, bud 9, M9, Padjam and one of the geneva in that size range. I have fruit from about 4 years at the very earliest to 10 years, average maybe 6 or 7 ish.
@СерджиоБевз Жыл бұрын
I liке on 7.30 sek...Rubio× king david 145 ..❤❤
@owendavies8227 Жыл бұрын
Those brown spots look like a boron deficiency or excess. Get your soil tested.
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
I do have a trace mineral soil test from when I first moved here. Pretty sure it was low in boron, but it has been a long time. I've made some adjustments. Whatever it is, it seems specific to this variety. So maybve a bit low and this is especially susceptible. someone else said calcium.
@owendavies8227 Жыл бұрын
@@SkillCult It's possible calcium might be an issue as well, but ALL of your apple trees show signs of boron and iron deficiency in the leaf pattern even if they don't show up on the fruit themselves. Fixing the deficiencies will greatly improve quality and productivity.
@СерджиоБевз Жыл бұрын
I like King david×rubiат..on 39.23 sec.It's very..black❤❤❤..suреr... дякую
@SkillCult Жыл бұрын
it's a real looker for sure. I think it might be cider material rather than dessert material, but we'll see. I made a bunch of that cross last spring.