I sometimes get jealous of Washington and California growers as they seem to have an advantage with weather and pests, but hearing your issues reminds me that we all have our challenges. Here in Kansas my apple crop was better than usual and I took my last tasting walk yesterday. My orchard is slowly improving. I use the STUN method - sheer total utter neglect, but I still get enough apples for the family typically. Watching your efforts always pushes me to go do a little more. I learn listening to you and I get inspired by your passion and enthusiasm. Thank you.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
So true, same as every season has its benefits and challenges. I am glad our disease and pest pressure is low or I probably wouldn't have the patience for apples lol. Or I would go all in on breeding for disease resistance. The nice thing about the STUN method is you reallly see what rises to the challenge. I'm not one to babysit weak, primadona plants. I could use cold water to water my lettuce starts in a shade house, then shade them and water 3 times a day, but I'd rather keep trying different lettuce varieties til I find stuff I don't have to pamper.
@Highlander.72 ай бұрын
the STUN method is where it is at. i do some hobby breeding with cannabis. it is insane how many weak plants are being bred and made available.
@mattv52812 ай бұрын
Its cool that you're working with Cummins Nursery. I've bought a fair number of trees online, and the ones from Cummins were by far the healthiest.
@carlandrews5810Ай бұрын
Have you done any videos on using biochar when planting apple trees by any chance?
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
No. You will need a lot to make any difference. I've planted some on big pits that are 10% char, but they are up to 3 feet deep and 8 to 10 feet across!
@lornabaker40392 ай бұрын
So glad to see an update from you! I was just checking yesterday for a new video and sad that there weren’t any. Will you have scions of that “best red fleshed” apple available this winter?
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
No, not this time for sure. I need to assess it more and decide what to do with it. I've not eaten enough fruit yet or made enough observations. I've managed to use it in making crosses a lot though, to its genes will be going out this year in seeds at least. the original tree is so weak that it is probably going to take new trees and branches to get much quality fruit. I have it grafted out in various places, so hopefully that won't take too long.
@primoculturefarms2 ай бұрын
The long awaited update! Hope you're doing well Steven.
@kathleenebsen2659Ай бұрын
Stephen, you are an inspiration! You have kept persevering towards your dream through very tough times. Now you are seeing it through. Keep it up!
@tracybruring75602 ай бұрын
Grew cherokee purple this year and they knocked my socks off with the flavor. Will grow those again.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
try paul robeson. It is like that kind of tomato taken to the next level. Very susceptible to late blight though. If I had grown it this year it would probably be completely toast.
@december12ist2 ай бұрын
This is one man I wish I knew in person and wish I could learn what he knows. I wish I could help him with the work he is part of. I know I could learn a lot from and not just about apples.... Good luck my friend. I'm glad your channel has grown. Maybe one day we will meet. Stay amazing and keep flourishing.
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
Thanks :). hat might be possible in the future. Eventually I'll need to have long term interns or apprentices. Probably when I get moved to a new place.
@jeremythomas32732 ай бұрын
Man your getting old skillcult. Been watching for years! Congeats on the harvest. Your the last of a dying breed. Pass your precious knoledge down as much as you can. Much love brotha
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I think I've been doing youtube for over ten years maybe. lost track, so yeah, old lol.
@zachyates84402 ай бұрын
Zone 2 grower here. I germinated about 30 of your seeds. I am hoping that they make it through an Alaskan winter!!
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
good luck. It's a numbers game for you guys up there
@dinosaurfarm2 ай бұрын
Zone 3 in northern BC and my first round of Edholm seeds got about 90% survival their first winter, I leaned heavy to Wickson as the parent. I was expecting more mortality so I'll have to space them further out manually, assuming they make it through this winter too.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
@@dinosaurfarm Someone was saying that there is a nursery in I think zone 4 growing a lot of red fleshed apples. Hopefully some of them are hardy.
@Wisconsin_Gardener2 ай бұрын
Sweet 16 is my new favorite variety.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
When it's good, it can be amazing. I hope it is a lot more consistent there than here. It is a northern variety. I won't grow it here for anything but breeding because it is the odd year that it is worth eating.
@Wisconsin_Gardener2 ай бұрын
@@SkillCult I only started gardening and growing trees last year. 26 fruit trees later and here I am.
@manatoa12 ай бұрын
Good to see you back!
@Kozu6042 ай бұрын
Always good to see you and your works.
@limenzest2 ай бұрын
I had some varieties go bad and not ripen properly with the high heat this year. Other varieties made it through, especially the trees that have good soil and regular irrigation
@WildFreeinWestVirginia2 ай бұрын
I love your videos and I had already ordered some of your Apple trees from Cummings Nursery. I live 30 miles from the farm where the Golden Delicious Apple came from. Central West Virginia
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Awesome!
@Digitaldryad2 ай бұрын
It sucks losing so much fruit, but it's great to be such an active part of your local ecosystem
@notforwantoftrying12 ай бұрын
I've grown Crimson Crush for several years in a row and it has great blight resistance, large and well shaped fruit, heavy cropping, and the flavor is excellent. I would highly recommend it, the only drawback is that it's a hybrid. I did get one bad seed that was not true to type in the pack I bought, so be careful with which supplier you go with.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Sounds interesting. All apples from seed are hybrids in the sense that they almost never grow true to seed. That is good if you want to make new apple varieties.
@sherwarlockplays61792 ай бұрын
finally I was rewatching his videos last night I really missed this thank God his back I am so happy I just went to comments
@feralkevin2 ай бұрын
I love the work you are doing. If only people were doing this in every climate and with not just apples, how much richer the world would be!
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
Yes, i think that is the future. Apples are like a gateway fruit, but hopefully more and more people will take up breeding and selection. It is a now much neglected aspect of horitculture and almost all plants can still be improved and diversified.
@Highlander.72 ай бұрын
Cheers from Sacramento brother, i love your work and thoroughly look forward to the updates. can we expect apple seed around February in your store? cheers and blessings, shalom
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I hope earlier. someone else asked me to try to make them available sooner. I'm usually waiting for the late varieties to come in, but maybe I won't this year and just list when they are almost all in. the best ways in order to find out about seed and scion availability are patreon, subbing to my blog and instagram, then youtube :)...
@Donnie_M.2 ай бұрын
STEED variety apples now available at a nursery. Very cool.
@nonyadamnbusiness98872 ай бұрын
And here I am in north Florida still waiting on my first apple. We had essentially no winter. Only the Shell of Alabama and Sundowner flowered. Not enough for the bees to pay any attention. Most of the trees didn't even leaf out until the end of May. I wish I could try some of your crosses, but there's no point. We have to concentrate our efforts on early flowering and fast maturing.
@marktaylor26452 ай бұрын
Try putting some herbs or flowers under your tree that flower at the same time the apples do, to attract pollinators.
@nonyadamnbusiness98872 ай бұрын
@@marktaylor2645 All two and half acres is covered in blooms all the time. There weren't enough apple blooms for some random pollinator to make the connection from tree to tree.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
have you explored kuffle creek and his blog for varieties they grow in the tropics? The real way to win that game though is going to be breeding for the climate.
@dinosaurfarm2 ай бұрын
My geese have learned to jump up, grab a branch, and shake the branch until the apples fall down so they can eat them. On the other hand, watering the trees with goose water means they rarely have an off-year. I'm in northern BC, Canada though so if I didn't have my dogs the moose would take the trees down to the snowline. Hard to think that when I'm gone my test orchard likely won't survive me.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Fencing moose out is a whole other bag of dicks I would think. We have Elk in the area, but not here. I can imagine trying to keep those things out though. My chickens learned to jump up and get pretty high apples, but in a good year there are plenty of drops and they help clean up buggy fruits that fall interupting the life cycle.
@andrejofak47872 ай бұрын
Nice to see you in action again. Are there apple varieties that would develop more creamier texture like tropical fruits? Would growing the apple seedlings and than grafting them work in developing new varieties? Thanks!
@mr.fraedd6932 ай бұрын
Oh, i feel you it is disappointing to put so much work in it and have little results. Of my apples only two hand pollinated flowers took this year, due to late frosts. Those two fruits rotted on the tree. I got one fruit of a hand pollinated pear with one viable seed... But i am happy to have at least a few apples. So i will sow some open pollinated seeds and will try to improve my "technique" of growing the seedlings. It took them very long to continue growing after i transplanted them to outside this spring. Thanks for the inspirating Videos!
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
well, it is a good way to cultivate patience lol.
@projectmalus2 ай бұрын
Something I had great success with a few yrs back was homemade corrugated cardboard tree tubes filled with potting soil. Better to direct sow in spot they are to grow (I did that too) but 16 of these fit in a milk crate and I was able to do 11 crates in a small space. I made them 14 inches tall and 2 5/8 a side where I slit thru one side to bend it. Put paper in the bottom of the crate and plant after they sprout asap. Watch for ants if you put them on the ground. Usually they don't all sprout so one tube can be destroyed to get a hand under the tube and lift it out, I didn't find it a problem nor the cardboard rotting too quick. Cheers.
@mr.fraedd6932 ай бұрын
@@projectmalus Thanks for that advice. Seems like a good and affordable option. I will definitely try that! Direct sowing wont work here. Either the mice ore the slugs would just eat the seedlings.
@thewrenchreviews99862 ай бұрын
Grew a dwarf tomato this year called Awesome. Incredible flavor, very well balamced and intense. Orange/yellow with red in its heart when ripe and blushed on its exterior. Best tomato I have grown alongside the Berkeley Tie Dyed and the varuous Bumble Bee Cherrry tomatoes.
@David-kd5mf2 ай бұрын
The dang varmints ! I had the one two punch of squirrels and woodchuck get most of my apples
@PlanetaryAwareness2 ай бұрын
Do you sell any trees of cuttings of any varieties that are less susceptible to plum curculio? We're in VA and it's always been an issue. Asian pears not affected much.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I don't have that information. we have something that looks like plum curculio here, but I'm not sure it is and it isn't bad enough to make any real observations. You might have to try them and tell me ha ha.
@Arcturus2182 ай бұрын
I’ve always loved your videos about apples. I bought a house with apple trees on the property, but I think they are just wild? I don’t pick them because the birds and opossums love them.
@dlbuffmovie2 ай бұрын
Woo hoo on getting stuff out for sale!! Hoping you get some commission from them, cause I'll be getting a couple that I've not managed to get from your auctions.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Yeah, they are charging a royalty fee for me.
@ArthurWierzchos2 ай бұрын
Great to see you sharing content again Steven. Hoping that angel investor or two show up to help you kick into a higher gear. You are an inspiration to so many of us. Ive been trying all the apples Im able to here in Poland, and saving seeds from the best ones. One in particular really stood out this year. It was a pink/red flesh, softer texture, but not mealy or unpleasant. Actually, it has been one of my favorite apples Ive tried yet, although im nowhere near the connoisseur status as yourself, so my opinion is somewhat limited. The flavor definitely had strawberry and cherry in it, and it wasn't very subtle either. It was labeled as "Paula Red". Are you familiar with this one? I did take some photos, and saved every seed that i could, and intend to plant them all. Id be happy to send you more info via email if it interests you.
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
I have not grown paula red yet. I should find it. I didn't know it could have pink flesh. I'll look for it.
@lukearts29542 ай бұрын
How about offering the foxes something more attractive than apples? Like chickens... Find an egg farm in your area and ask about their rotation schedule. They retire the animals after a year or 18 months of laying, and then they sell them off to processing plants for cents. So if you offer them $10, you might go home with 15-20 sacrificial chickens. Keep them cooped up except 2-3 for the foxes to take instead of apples. If they take the bait, it's a cost effective low effort solution. Once they take it, maybe move the chickens further and further away from the orchard.
@draketeeth80048 күн бұрын
In the past he has had chickens. Offering sacrifice birds may set a bad standard and put his own flock in peril if the foxes get used to being fed on his property.
@TheNuggetlegsАй бұрын
The Golden Harvey I sent you was from the USDA. When it's good, the flavor is great, but I've only had good ones once in 5 years. It's also hella disease prone.
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
Nothing doing here yet. Like so many other famous apples.
@St.IsaacOfSyria2 ай бұрын
Seeds are always sold out. Oh well, can't do apples very well in Fl anyway.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Seeds happen in the winter and sometimes are available for months. But not all year.
@alancole13942 ай бұрын
Welcome back
@bertbert27252 ай бұрын
i have some varieties on my frankentree that were inspired by your videos. (29 varieties currently. in Belgium) but it was a bad year and then the tree got hit by a storm. i got one king david that was delicious, 2 chestnut and 2 golden russet. the only branch in the tree that got lots of appels was wickson and it was the first time it fruited. i guess this apple needs more sun than we had because it was really underwhelming. not much flavor and just quite acidic.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Wickson really has to have time to ripen all the way. I have not picked mine yet. It may also not like it there and early crops are often not the best.
@aryehaidman66602 ай бұрын
if i have a couple apple and peach trees how do i keep the squirels/birds away. i didn't get a single apple/peach this year because of the squirels.
@mrstihl162 ай бұрын
Any chance you can list seeds for sale earlier in the year so we can do the same thing by just germinating them in pots left outside? I don't get enough cold hours where I am to reliably do that when I bought seed last year.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I'll think about trying to. I usually wait till the late stuff is in, but maybe I won't this year, in which case, maybe by even early dec.
@justincole87732 ай бұрын
Before you cull the banana flavored apple with pink flesh please send out some scions. I’ve got my jewel, Pomo sanel, dodd’s, winter banana. Crossing them with Kandil sinap and trying to get some long shaped banana flavored apples. 😂 Frost hit my jewel hard this year and itching for it to get fruit next growing season.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I won't kill it. I just am not likely to send it to anyone except breeders. I might be able to send out some pollen this year. The long banana flavored apple idea is brilliant. good luck!
@mikemadison74102 ай бұрын
California farmland is very expensive to buy. A lot of land in my area (Winters, CA) that is planted to orchards is on a thirty-year lease, written into the deed, so that the farmer doesn't have to lay out the millions to buy the land but gets the use of it. Some of the leases are cash rent, others are crop-share. I enjoy your videos, and they inspired me to plant some Wickson, about 200 trees. The Bud9 rootstock doesn't grow worth a damn, but on M111 the trees are doing great.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
There are little pockets here and there that are more isolated that aren't too expensive, because actual farmers are not likely to look at them. There is one under 400k big acreage, creek, pond and about 10 acres of bottom land. Who knows what the soil is really like though. it is not likely to be the best of the best. But even just really actually flat bottom land is a start.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I don't make much cider, but I don't see any reason they would not be good.
@mikemadison74102 ай бұрын
@@SkillCult Looks like from your videos you are in maybe Sonoma or Mendocino county. My friend, Kristyn Leach (Namu Farm, Second Generation Seeds), a truly wonderful farmer, last year bought an 8 acre farm in Sebastopol (price in 7 figures) based on a go-fund-me type campaign. You have a lot of followers--I bet you could raise a few hundred K$ or more with that. I'd kick in.
@backyardfigs2 ай бұрын
Hey Steven, thanks again for sending Rubaiyat pollen so fast. Just in time to polinate Goldrush. Today, I had picked 7 polinated apples. Btw, I know that your property is much larger then mine, but could you use at least on some areas electric netting fence? Solar powered, even bears will leave your apples alone. Zarko from Michigan.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Keeping small animals out is pretty hard. Most bears are deterred by the electric fence around one orchard, but not all of them.
@alberteinstein54212 ай бұрын
Is there anyone in Europe who sells your varieties or might plan to do so? Would love to try the Vanilla Pink, but I don't think I could handle the bureaucracy of importing living plant matter (and likely the cost associated)...
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Quite possibly. You can contact me through the website.
@baddriversofcolga2 ай бұрын
I'll be curious to see how those Honeycrisp crosses come out. It's my favorite grocery store apple and it reminds me of Fla-Vor-Ice. It's unfortunate it's hard to grow, though (at least in the east anyway).
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I ate the second fruit there and it was actually really good. Nice, somewhat complex fruity flavor. Finally a good honeycrisp. I don't think it will be that hard to improve into a healthier tree with a little intent.
@Menstral2 ай бұрын
I would become a fox cereal-ender
@tonythepwny2 ай бұрын
It's been a crazy temp year in Michigan, late frost killed most of the flowers on my trees. Got my first PRI-FTZ apple, it was tiny and partially eaten by a lady bug, tasted like bubblegum. Got my first Trailman X Pink Parfait apples from a tree I planted in probably 2020, super tart but edible, nothing intriguing.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Now I need PRI-FTZ! Give that trailman x PP time. maybe it will shape up.
@MaluseedGrowers2 ай бұрын
What are the odds that on the same day I discovered a Blossom on my 1.5 year Gold Rush Graft and you Upload a New video. Nice👍
@mynameisnotcory2 ай бұрын
It was a bad year for all my plants. No tomatoes, very few peppers, carrots were small, no apples and i lost a tree, peach tree almost dsplit in half, and even my luffa gourd didnt set even a single fruit /: ive been doing this for 10 years and ive never had to work harder for no fruit
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Bummer. Better luck next year.
@Highlander.72 ай бұрын
hmm I've looked into farm credit for buying land, but even just a lease as someone mentioned would be awesome. land around this area is expensive, up north around Redding's outskirts there is a great amount of affordable land avg 5k or less per acre. although I've seen 600 acres for 300k. it is decent area with springs wells and creeks throughout. I am unsure of the soil type of there . here in Sacramento we have 1 -2 ft of topsoil and then solid clay ancient lakebed all the way down.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
norcal iin general is cheap right now, but higher end, closer in properties less so. I could buy something totally adequate for a basic homestead no problem, even with significant flat fertile ground. I may end up doing that, but it doesn't feel right just now. My vision is too big to be contained by a mediocre property, so compromising now is letting that go essentially.
@Michael-vr3uf2 ай бұрын
Judging apples just plucked from the tree has its pitfalls. Golden Harvey, from what the literature says, needs more than a month in storage to develop its full aroma.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Here they are already soft. I don't think they would improve in storage or could be picked early enough. It may not even be the real golden harvey, who knows, but probably just can't take the heat.
@Michael-vr3uf2 ай бұрын
@@SkillCult I've grafted one here; we'll see whether it is any good. Otherwise I'll graft it over to something like d'Arcy Spice or Wickson (got the scion from someone who got it from you😊).
@DevaJones032 ай бұрын
the silver fox vs the regular fox LOL 6:46 i'm definitely interested if you offer it. i'd grow it out here to see what it has to offer. sir....you might want to start scouting out rich women like the saying goes do some strange things for some change LOL you're right though the house i live in now i drove by it all the time and said i want to live in that neighborhood and well now i do so you never know. but until then short hoochie man shorts around rich women
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
lol.
@michaellacy85102 ай бұрын
Gray foxes are smart and persistent. And good climbers. I love ‘em. But they can be a pain in the ass.
@СерджиоБевз2 ай бұрын
Хай вашi мечти збудуться...❤
@940joey22 ай бұрын
It’s always a good day to see a new skillcult video !! Hope you’re doing well, Steven. Inspiring and educational as always. 🤙
@syrup-man67042 ай бұрын
How about a guard dog?
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
It is tempting, but I'd have to listen to it bark all night at everything and there is a lot to bark at here lol.
@paul.13372 ай бұрын
Honeycrisp crosses?!? Betrayal!!! (I'm kidding.)
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
I actually ate that other one and it was really good. finally one with flavor. Seems like a good base to work from if we can get some healthy, vital genetics in there. Of course everyone else already is, so there is less incentive there.
@QuentinKreamer2 ай бұрын
I been having issues with Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers damaging my two apple trees.
@carlandrews5810Ай бұрын
Likewise
@SkillCult11 күн бұрын
I have something similar. they don't do a lot of damage, so I just ignore them. They don't seem to bother the trees too much, at least not here. the holes heal up pretty fast.
@rubygray77492 ай бұрын
Time to tan a fox fur coat
@sherwarlockplays61792 ай бұрын
my only problem is my climate is tropical but i will keep trying my best to start seeds
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
There are some apples that will grow in the tropics and more can be developed. Check out the apples and oranges blog and kuffle creek. You can just plant a lot of seeds from all over and see what makes it. But I think you'll do better by choosing seeds of apples that already do well in the tropics. Make a list and try to get those varieties as trees and seeds of them.
@ArthurWierzchos2 ай бұрын
There are people growing apples in Hawaii, and getting them to fruit with zero chill hours in the lower elevations.
@sherwarlockplays61792 ай бұрын
@@ArthurWierzchos how do they start seeds
@sherwarlockplays61792 ай бұрын
@@ArthurWierzchos what variety
@ArthurWierzchos2 ай бұрын
@@sherwarlockplays6179 When i lived there I just planted the seeds into pots, and eventually had a couple hundred trees pop up. I was in a higher and cooler elevation at the time, so that might have helped. Steven (SkillCult) has some great videos going into detail about good practice for starting seeds by stratifying them first.
@lukebracero38752 ай бұрын
hey Uncle it's your nephew.😊
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
Hey! ❤🤘
@BaronShawThiessen2 ай бұрын
I've been waiting on the tomboy update
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
It hasn't peaked yet, but I just ate a couple that were very good.
@СерджиоБевз2 ай бұрын
Я надiюсь...що колись спробую на смак вашi сорти яблук..бо в нас вони дуже дорогi (живцi)..
@СерджиоБевз2 ай бұрын
У вас унiверсiтет нових сортiв...😊❤
@abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxy262 ай бұрын
You mentioned before that you suffer from low energy. I did also till I began talking a good multivitamin. Try taking a multivitamin.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
been there done that. I'm starting to feel better pretty consistently. fingers crossed.
@okam86622 ай бұрын
Get a game camera so you know what's doing the damage....my guess is raccoons.
@SkillCult2 ай бұрын
It's a host of characters, possums, coons, foxes, bears, occasionally deer if the bears break the fences down and let them in.
@Menstral2 ай бұрын
Dye your beard, it will look better AND your subscribers will increase.