The Tropical Fruit Forum
Temperate Fruit & Orchards => Temperate Fruit Discussion => Topic started by: Mango Stein on July 23, 2018, 11:36:14 PM
-
According to http://fruitsandnuts.ucdavis.edu/dsadditions/_Asian_Pears/: (http://fruitsandnuts.ucdavis.edu/dsadditions/_Asian_Pears/:)
"Most Japanese pear varieties are dwarfed about 50% on P. communis rootstock"
and "[Nijisseiki/20th Century] should not be grown on P. Communis rootstock because it is badly dwarfed."
My question is whether there is a Nashi that is minimally affected by P. communis roostock. I want to graft onto a Josephine de Malines espalier. If that works, then the next year I guess I could do Nijisseiki on top of that, because the interstem should no longer dwarf it.
My last contingency would be to use a Chinese White Pear like Ya Li for an interstem, but they are bland from the description I've read.
-
Perhaps you should have tried Comice pear. It is one of the few pears considered to show good intercompatibility with quince rootstock, and is also the most delicious variety.
-
Good thinking SoCal2warm... because that is exactly what I did. My tree is Doyenne du Comice on Quince A rootstock. I remember reading about this good compatibility and desirable dwarfing result. The thing is, with limited space, I wanted more cultivars and so the tree is espalier and every level is a different cultivar. Beaurre Superfine, Red Williams and Josephene were grafted on levels above the Comice.
I think I am going to try Hosui nashi as the next level and let everyone know how it goes. My tree is quite slow-growing but that is a side-effect of maintaining a semi-dwarf.