Any other pear tree that blooms around the same time as the Kieffer pear tree should be able to pollinate it. Some good choices are Bartlett, Anjou, or Bosc pear trees. Be sure to consider the compatibility of bloom times and cross-pollination requirements when choosing a pollinator tree.
There would be 168 apple trees in the orchard. Since the ratio of apple trees to pear trees is 4 to 3, and there are 126 pear trees, you can find the number of apple trees by multiplying 126 by 4/3.
You would have no pears. The given situation is a play on words and does not actually result in any pears.
The partridge in the Christmas song "The Twelve Days of Christmas" is perched in a pear tree.
Since it is a pear tree and bears fruit, it is an angiosperm.
no
Any plant can pollinate with any plant. Just so long as there's bees there. Bees accidentally get pollen from other plants on there feet and can ACCIDENTALLY cross-pollinate. So, yes, a pear CAN pollinate with a plum tree.
actually, my great, great, great grandfather did.i believe his name was John Gunn. It might be different, but that is just what i remember my grandmother telling me.and he is from Texas. but there is also a "apple-pear tree" and that is actually different. the "pear-apple tree" is pears that have been grown on an apple tree, and the "apple-pear tree" is apples that have been grown on a pear tree.someone in Asia invented that one.
Ubileen can successfully cross pollinate with Orcas, Seckel, Highland, Comice, Bosc and Asian Pears.
Yes, graft a pear branch to an apple tree or an apple branch to a pear tree.
It depends on the type of apple tree, some are self pollinating and some need other trees pollen in order to pollinate.
newton under tree
An apple pear is a variety of northeast Asian species of pear with a crisp juicy texture, or the tree from which it comes, Latin name Pyrus pyrifolia.
pear tree - a pair of shoes fir tree - the fur of an animal
Any other pear tree that blooms around the same time as the Kieffer pear tree should be able to pollinate it. Some good choices are Bartlett, Anjou, or Bosc pear trees. Be sure to consider the compatibility of bloom times and cross-pollination requirements when choosing a pollinator tree.
Yes, a Golden Dorsett apple tree can cross-pollinate with a Fuji apple tree. Both are compatible in terms of pollination, as they bloom around the same time and can transfer pollen to each other for successful fruit production.
Parker or Patten will pollinate a Summer Crisp.