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Your seedlings are either 50% Pink Lady or 100% Pink Lady, so they are worth growing to see what you get. (Actually, they aren't Pink Lady apples -- see below.) Let's go back to the beginning.
Even though apples are not native to North America, there's something about the fruit that's so American. Perhaps it's because apples are grown in all 50 states and there are 2,500 different ...
Apple farmer Neil Yates describes what practices he uses in his pink lady apple orchard to enhance fruit colour.
The industry expects a large crop for the third year in a row, preventing growers from getting the return they need to be ...
Craig Chester from Apple and Pear Australia, which owns the Pink Lady trademark, said the aim was to find a high-value home for what could be a discarded piece of fruit.
December 12, 2001More than 23years ago By Market Watch 12/12 ...
The Pink Lady apple, a variant of the Lady Williams, was the first apple variety to be trademarked. Kerry Raymond/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY From the same breeding program emerged the Sundowner ...
Shoppers will be able to buy UK-grown Pink Lady apples for the first time from today (18 February), supplied by Kent-based growers Adrian Scripps and Worldwide Fruit. Brand licensor Coregeo said ...
Producers are promising an excellent quality Pink Lady crop this year as the Northern Hemisphere season kicks off. The first 2009 fruit, from France, is expected to be on shelf in the UK in the next ...
A Kent-based firm has partnered with Pink Lady apples to launch a new flavour of crisps. Nim’s Fruit Crisps, based on the Trinity Trading Estate in Sittingbourne, has signed an exclusive ...
In 1984, one of the more than 100,000 experimental seedlings produced an attractive fruit; it was bright pink, crisp, flavorsome and long-storing. Cripps had a hand in both its names: the Cripps ...
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